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445 lines
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Plaintext
Episode: 1589
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Title: HPR1589: KC MakerFair 2014
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1589/hpr1589.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 05:30:09
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---
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's Aniston Fair at AnanasThost.com.
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And once again, a long time no here.
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I am back to report on Nicarphere in Kansas City.
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Which was the fourth annual Nicarphere.
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And as is my once, I live there for the fourth time at the Union Station
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in downtown Kansas City on June the 28th and 29th.
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That last weekend in June of the year of our Lord 2000 and 14.
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I did it a little bit different this year.
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I have some cards and literature that I picked up from various booths
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that I was really interested in.
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And I didn't just record it driving on my way home.
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So I'd be a little more organized in.
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That was a couple of weeks ago.
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It was a holiday weekend in the US, the week following for our independent state.
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And then I was at a client site on the east coast of the United States.
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And so got back from that until I record the show.
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So some of the things that I saw.
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I'm going to go over a few things that might be of interest to people more locally
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and will get to some of the really interesting and I think even important things
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that are non-local and will be an impact on the community itself.
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So that and enjoy my little story around my little walk around on the Saturday
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of the Maker Fair this year.
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I did not participate as actively as I have in previous years.
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Our little local Make KC group has kind of not been very organized over the past year.
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And there were a few of them there representing that there wasn't any call for people to help out
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things. So I was just there to walk around and see things.
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That's like the first year that I was at the Maker Fair.
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And this is interesting because as I go through some of these things,
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there's been kind of a gradual, shall we say, evolution and even some of the things that
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have been really refined over the years.
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Some of the things that are just strictly local and I'm not sure that this will make
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difference for anybody outside of you in Kansas City.
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But corn-label brewing company is a new local micro-probe room.
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It's going to be right here in Kansas City, kind of locally.
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And they're going to be opening for business in not too many months.
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So if you're in the Kansas City area, you and I should get together and I'll buy you an adult
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beverage at that place or perhaps some other ones.
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Another really interesting one was Nerdbox N-E-R-B-B-O-T-F.
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It's Nerdbox.net.
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And there's someone named Nicholas at Nerdbox.net that was,
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this was really interesting.
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I actually have some things in my pile of carts.
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That's a nanogram.
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He's in both the basement and the attic.
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But I might take over the Nicholas just because I know he'll do something
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create with it instead of them just going into the landfill.
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I may have some comments on that.
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There is a new cable TV show called Hold and Catch Fire
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that's on the American television cable networks.
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I can't remember which one.
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I've seen a couple episodes of it.
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It's about, basically, about contact computer in Texas building my viewing home.
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That's not, you know, that name because you have to change the names of things, right?
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But that's essentially what the situation is.
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I have a box that I want to get a hold of the producers of that show.
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You can even notice the producers of Hold and Catch Fire.
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They should email me.
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H-P-R, at Mr. Gadgets.com.
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Because I actually have a box of documents,
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archival documents that they could use in the show.
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I have some of the boxes with some old bite magazines and some other
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magazines of that era.
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I'm in the 70s era.
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If anybody wants those, they're more than welcome to them.
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But you have to pay the shipping and it's a box of papers.
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So that's going to be really, really expensive.
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What Nicholas does is take old tech and make little robots out of them.
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Now they're not working robots.
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They're just kind of little models of robots.
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But it was very cool.
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It was very interesting.
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I might take into things and see if I can't condition the work out of some old tech that I have.
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And at least your old tech is becoming part of the source and not just really into the landfill.
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So that was an interesting one.
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I also met a young lady who had a very interesting steampunk jewelry.
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If you're interested in that, there's a lot of crossover between the steampunk crowd.
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I think and the maker crowd.
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And in fact, one of my local KC makers had his boot this year.
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And his the steampunk seems kind of a boost.
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Her actual Etsy website for some very nice steampunk style jewelry
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is steampindjoolery.fc.com.
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And so if you're interested in steampunk and specifically in steampunk fine jewelry,
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I encourage you to go and check out her things that she has.
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Another semi-local group.
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If you're in the Omaha area or up in Nebraska or Western Iowa, let's say,
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the Omaha does have a maker group now and gets Omaha maker group.org.
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And apparently they are going to have a mini maker fair.
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If I remember it, it's something like the 60th of September.
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I remember that because I actually have several different things which are possible to do
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something I might be interested in.
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And probably the Omaha makers groups mini maker fair is going to lose out because there's
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some that are a little bit closer to why would be more interested in.
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But if you live around there want to head that direction, I believe if you look at their site,
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they would be talking about this mini maker fair that they are going to have.
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Of course, that's what at least make KC guys like to claim they did mini maker fair.
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Stopped in Parkville, a little town just up over and across over from Kansas City for a few years.
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Before the big maker fair officials, maker fair came to the Union Station.
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There was also another little interesting kind of 3D modeling,
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but there's a lot of CG modeling and things.
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They called them PIEHECKERS, P-I-HECKRS with the H and the R capitalized.
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And I don't know if they have any kind of website or anything.
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The most interesting, you know, you see a lot of 3D printers.
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And in fact, I have a comment about that a little bit later, but you see a lot of 3D printers
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of the maker fairs and that's a lot of the maker community is very interested in those.
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This one was really unique because not only was it a 3D printer mostly made with wood rather
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than plastic or metal as, you know, the fringing and everything like that.
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But the kids who made this particular 3D printer had some of the most unique hardware
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because he had actually taken apart an office desk and was using like the rollers for the
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office desk door. Well, that's what he was using as the basis for the rollers for his table
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that he was moving and things like that.
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So that was really a kind of unique 3D printer, but he's not going in the commercial justice
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use just making that for himself. Now, the last local thing that we're really making
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the transition now into things where there is a, this is a local company, but they are
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transitioning to selling things online so that you have an online and I think this is a
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another situation where there's a strong thin diagram and a strong crossover.
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If you do that thin diagram between, as I mentioned before, the steam pump community
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and the maker community, the hacker community and the maker community, right?
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Would be another thin diagram like that. In fact, if you did a three-way thin diagram
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and it's still probably a pretty good crossover. Also, the sci-fi community, my friend Kevin
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who used to be with the Ohio Linux system, you hear him all the time on hacker public radio, he
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actually participates in really cool combination sci-fi and hacker Linux kind of convention
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that they have up around the Great Lakes where he lives. And that one would be perfect for me.
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Good, good thin diagram. Sci-fi, good. You know, Linux and open source, good.
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Anyway, so these are my new friends at TAPAQ. That's T-A-P-P-E-C-U-E and of course it is
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www.TAPAQ.com. These guys have a wireless Bluetooth thermometer that you can use with your
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barbecue. So if you're doing any grilling or smoking, the TAPAQ people have you covered.
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And I think that's pretty strong, you know, thin diagram crossover between ghosts who like to,
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you know, could meet, meet, good. And it also would like to use technology in regards to that.
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And I'm thinking this is Bluetooth that have smartphone apps, right? So you can monitor and
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try to remember whether it was really, it might have even been Wi-Fi. You see, they're just Bluetooth
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so you'd have even farther that you can get away from your grill or spokeer and still be monitoring
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exactly what was happening there. So the TAPAQ temperature monitoring system might be just the same
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for you. And they're right here in the Kansas City area, but see their stuff. Very, very interesting
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about the only complaint I had is they didn't have anything that was grilled or smoked
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free. Give away, you know, samples of the pizza product. But I saw several things that were very
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interesting, wireless technology kinds of things. Control, you know, remote control,
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automation, that type of thing. And there was a lot of that around various types of technologies.
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I didn't bring a cartridge down, but there was one person I talked to that had some of that
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smaller sized microcontroller boards. A lot of the Arduino's, right, or the propeller boards.
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The Raspberry Pi might be a little bit on the high end of that kind of thing, but those, you
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know, the small controllers types of boards that are driving a lot of the maker community and then
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be catching up electronic stuff. He had a set of boards that were very similar to that. And it
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has some wireless capabilities so you can have, you know, things as remote centers and having
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them communicate and things like that. What I thought was interesting about his particular project.
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It was designed for the .NET programmer in line. So it used a kind of micro.NET that was available.
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And you could use your same tools that you're familiar with and your same skill set that
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you made familiar with if you make your living with .NET. You don't have to relearn some new
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little Arduino-specific language or anything like that. You can use your standard tools and you can
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write against your library that you're interested in and a new set of libraries with the sensors.
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And there you go. Now, I know a lot of people think, oh, .NET, it's proprietary and all that kind of
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thing. But, you know, if you don't want to have to relearn everything, it's a good way to get
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in on some of these types of things and not have to burn an entire new programming skill set or
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a whole new set of tools. So if that's interesting of interest to you, I can probably find somewhere
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just don't have it with me, his card and things like that. In terms of controlling, there were a
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couple of interesting ones like I said. There's a lot of kind of home control kinds of things I was
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seeing and some of them where people get customized to spoke. You know, this is what I'm doing to
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hackers, you know, doing that kind of thing. Some of them were commercial entities. A couple of
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those. There was a Kickstarter for this one. It was called My Nerd. That's nerd like, you know,
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what you are. My nerd.com. And it was a app that you can use to control various and
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secondary types of things, lights, open up your garage, you know, things like that. You know,
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you're home control type of thing. They had a real interesting little setup where they had
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taken some old style for my, you know, press board and made themselves kind of little very flat boxes.
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So it looked like it was the top of the table, but it was actually, you know, maybe a few centimeters,
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you know, a couple of inches, uh, call and fit right onto the standard, you know, just
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put tables that they had, but they had those things that it was wiring so that you could plug a
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light bulb in and use the app to turn on and off the light bulb so they were kind of doing a demo
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of their stuff. And so that was there. The most interesting one for me though was another one
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called Kumo Connect. Now Kumo is KUMO. So it's not a CC name. It's a KC name, right? And they're
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from Kansas City. So you get RR. Anyway, uh, Kumo Connect. This one is real interesting. I took
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a young man's name, uh, the Blake and it's KumoConnect.com. They had some very sophisticated
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home, uh, kinds of automation ideas and products to sell. The interesting thing about this is
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I think I remember sitting Blake all the way back at the first maker fair when he was in the
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general area with the hackerspace group that we have here in Kansas City. And he was kind of
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talking about ideas and things that he was hacking together. And here four years later,
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he's got a company who has actual products that are either available or will be in
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in your future to sell you on doing these kinds of things. And I think that's asking more
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beginning to see this in maker culture start, you know, actually getting into, uh, practical kinds of
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inner and other things that we can sell to the public without them having to be super techy
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oriented. That's the revolution folks. That's what we need to see here is more and more of
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X. Along the lines of very interesting things and I had never heard of this before. They had a
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Kickstarter, which is, uh, unfortunately for you over, but then again, uh, it wouldn't have
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mattered if I even had done it on my way home that day. Their Kickstarter literally ended the
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Sunday of the maker fair in Kansas City. They're called Volt sets, the O-L-T-F-E-T.
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And they have a tiny URL, so you can do tinyurl.com slash Volt sets. I think that would probably
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take you to their Kickstarter, but that would of course take you to their website and everything
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like this. This was a Volt meter that you had frequency and capacity and check. I think if you
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got the higher priced option and it's a Volt meter that interacts with your smartphone.
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And turns your smartphone into a little weir. It's just a separate little wireless, you know,
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measurement and then it communicates with your smartphone for the display. Nice little piece of
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kit. When I get it, of course with and did the Kickstarter. And they don't call me a
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strict answer for nothing. And so they have that and I have that and we'll do a report on that
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when I eventually get that. But I'm looking forward to having that in my bag and some type of
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slightly protective for it, you know, so that I think it's broken and I, if I need to do a little
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little work, I'll have something much smaller than the standard Volt meter. And I can have a
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Volt meter, a very, very useful kind of thing. Let's meet at all times. Another thing I saw
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at the real maker fairs like this have a real make magazine, you know, kind of
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to sell you things in the maker shed and also feature certain things from the maker shed.
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And the real interesting, two interesting things about that. My friend Michael, I say that because
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I have his card and I noticed name from that. But I had his card for my last year also.
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You might remember this. I think I mentioned this last year. I was I was sitting at a
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table that is talking with some people from the publishing company that are right from nearby
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here in Kansas City over in Lawrence, Kansas. A little bit west of Kansas City that are the
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people who actually publish several limits oriented magazines. In fact, they were back this year.
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Doing their Raspberry Pi kinds of for you to magazines are very good for maker fairs.
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And they were selling bundles of those and things like that. I already have them all digitally and
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I don't want those atoms. I want the electrons right. I was sitting there and I was looking over
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the maker fair business where Michael was. And there was a very nice lovely winning case.
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And it was I had a display on it. It was about the size of a typical pad, androider, you know,
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apple, your standard 10 inch or so, this way. And then there was a Raspberry Pi sitting right on top of
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on top. Oh, how cool. He's in the Raspberry Pi and he's got a clip into this little portable
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display and he was actually streaming movies. I'm going to find out and go. There was a Raspberry
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Pi inside of the case, which he had had made. And he had his own little Raspberry Pi based Linux
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tablets. I said this before, but I will take every opportunity to say it again. And hopefully this
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year somebody's actually going to give this to me. I want my Linux tablets. And I just
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not Linux. Yes, there's a Linux kernel underneath there. But what I want is a true Linux
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tablet with one of these touch compatible user interfaces that we all know and all hate because
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they're making us do stuff new and different. And we all know that they're designed for touch
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interfaces. Somebody needs to make this for me. Okay, I will buy it. I want to be able to do all
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of the normal tablets. These things that I do, but when I want to, I want to command line.
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And I can cook up a Bluetooth keyboard and do lots of interesting things. And I want to be
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able to use my favorite either aptitude or aptitude or some aptitude to install things that I can
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run in that environment that aren't standard apps. I want to be able to get to work. Of course,
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that would be something legal like you know, they knew Linux distribution. When I'm on the road,
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I don't want to be able to do that. I want to create one item to do that. I don't want to have to
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boot up my laptop into Linux that's in order to do those kinds of things. I want it. I want
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it. They do the next tablet. He had built himself one. And he was back again this year. If he
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want to see his Linux tablet, it was written up in make magazine so I congratulated him for
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being published. And I believe the January issue of this year. And so he was back again and had his
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little tablet on display. And of course, his face now because it had been in make magazine,
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they also had some tiny circuits, which are like even smaller. These are about just a few centimeters
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by a few centimeters. It puts some comparisons here at the tiny circuits. They have little square
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kinds of boards. They have tiny lily, which are about the size of a United States dime.
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Most of these boards are smaller than a United States quarter,
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such as a few centimeters across. And it's a whole set of boards and actual processor boards
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and daughter boards, all the standard kinds of things. You have Bluetooth, Bluetooth,
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LE, Wi-Fi, gyroscope, compasses, seven type of displays, LED matrices, all kinds of things.
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And you can make this little stack. It's a very small set print. It's only a very small amount
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of centimeters or inches tall because you're stacking these right on top of one of them.
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You're all tiny little boards. So if you're wanting to do some things, but you need
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very, very small space and you don't need to spin the huge amount of R&D that we all know,
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it takes to get a lot of tonics to be very, very small. This is something that is a prototype board
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that will allow you to build up the layers, right? You know, things in the layers. And it will allow
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you to build up your small electronics into a tiny little space for your prototype.
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And that, of course, is available as a commercial venture. And then we have the last three things
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I'm going to talk about. And this is by far not the only things that I saw. I actually have some
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stuff. And later on tonight, I'm going to go to my first meeting of a little group here that's
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called the Medical Reserve Corps. It's the Kansas City version of that. And also I am not a
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medical professional. I am an amateur radio operator now in getting more radio active here. So expect
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to see or hear some shows in the non-judicial future about amateur radio and radio as a hobby
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and software-defined radio, things like that. Things I'm going to be experimenting around with.
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I'll tell you about those kinds of things. And I saw lots and lots of different things. These are
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just the highlight ones. I've got a bunch of cards and literature that I've already thrown out.
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But the three major things that I think were the most interesting to me. And then I'll tell you
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the highlight of the show. And so the three things that are the most interesting to me were
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there's a group of young men that I met last year from the maker group down in Arkansas.
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They're in a suburb of Little Rock, Arkansas. They had come up last year and we're showing
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there are 3D printers that they have been developing at things like this. You know, your standard
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kind of thing at a Baker Fair. These are ones that built ourselves. I remember they were all
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repwrap-ish kind of ones. You know, there's kind of two maybe three schools of printers up there
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and repwrap kind of is one of those. They were here this year. They come virtually available
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products for a 3D printer. Now this is mostly plastic parts with only the bare minimum of metal
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that you need. So this is, if you think of the repwrap as being kind of in general a lot of
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the cool thing about repwrap is you can, if you have a 3D printer, you can create a new 3D printer,
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right? It's like the robot is still the robot. So you can print on a repwrap. Most of the connectors
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you need, all you need for a repwrap is some metal rods and a press threaded metal rods.
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And of course you need the electronics and you need to do the step promoter and you need all
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those other kinds of things that are not going to be plastic or just metal from the hardware store.
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Well this is kind of that in a much more reduced form. Absolutely. Every thing that possibly can be
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is plastic. But they're selling it commercially for $199. This ladies and gentlemen is the
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Revolution. I lived through it before with micro computers where everybody was building their own.
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I soldered together my first Cosmic Elf. I think I've already talked about that. And up until this
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time 3D printing has mostly been a nerdy kind of techy guy thing and not something for the general
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public. And what I've been waiting for is both the Apple 2. I know a lot of hate Apple, but
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go with me here. This is the first one that is the commercially applicable. You just buy it,
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you take it home, you don't have to know a lot of stuff to get it working kind of thing. But
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you got to have money. They're expensive. Apple 2s were I could never afford an Apple 2 back when I
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was a starving college student and just after college as a single guy. I could not afford an Apple 2.
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There are some of the maker bots that are commercially available now that are coming into that
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kind of a price range. And then actually if you consider inflation between the mid 70s and now
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the even the $2,000. There's a one that Repetus came out with. If you talk about actual dollars
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in the mid 70s, those are already as cheap as an Apple 2 was if not cheaper, okay?
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But this one is really amazing to me. $199 in 2014 dollars. Compared to this, I like
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him to what all of his head could put in a Ford Apple 2, which was the Color Computer from Radio
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Jack. And somebody is actually not. He didn't have any of the cells at the show because they're running
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behind in production, not because of problems, but because of orders. But if there's a revolution
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you could buy, admittedly, no. This will not print everything that you're $2500 or $4,000
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printing machine will do. But it is so cheap that you could actually get it and put it in the
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hands of creative people that you know and love and let them know at it and see what they can do.
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I probably told this story before, but I'll tell you again when I was a senior in high school
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in 1973, okay? Yes, I am that old. I was taking physics class, okay? And for the first half
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of the year, everybody in class did the same thing that I did. We all used slide rules.
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And we were approximating these calculations. The slide rules weren't exact, but they got us
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close enough in the neighborhood that we did to what we needed for class. About half of the class
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that year got a Christmas present, which was way back then before there was a wall mark,
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before there was K-Mark. It was just crazy with K. For those of you in the United States,
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there was actually another kind of department store chain back in that time frame.
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And that one chain had a four-banger calculator, a four-function calculator, no memory,
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no programmability, no nothing it could do and subtract multiply divide.
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And it came in at the unbelievable price of $200. Now, this is $1973, fine, too.
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And that revolutionized everything within quote-unquote scientific derby at my high school. I mean,
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we were a bunch of, you know, taxis and nerds for the 73 days, right? We didn't have any computers
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computers in the exhaust yet that you could get for us, but we had a road rally every year.
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And up until then, the road rally was based upon the navigator using the slide rule to work out
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what your average speed was for the different segments of the rally. That year, the number one,
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two, and three of the road rally were of course cars that had the calculator and could get more
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in a more accurate calculation. A four-function calculator, I know it's hard for you to
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conceive of this at this point, but a four-function calculator that was a breakthrough price
|
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of $200. So that was $1973. This was $200 in 2014. This, as I said before,
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a leading gentleman is a revolution. This is a start. I've seen it before, and I'm telling you,
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this is another one. Get on board. If you can catch the wave, you can have yourself a very
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lucrative career here. If you understand this and can teach others how to do it, can do it for them,
|
|
can be involved in developing the systems for this, you won't have to worry about where your
|
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next meal is coming from. I'm self-taughting computer programming. I know what I'm talking about,
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|
and people can't see on one side what the difference is on the other side. When I first started
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seeing the hints of microcontrollers and microcomputers that would be available for a normal person
|
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when that first radio-electronics or popular electronics came out with the inside computer
|
|
that Bill Gates called college to go write basic four, I got an inkling of how important this
|
|
would be, but I didn't really understand everything about it until it got to the other side,
|
|
until it was four or five years later. I started to see really, really how big this wave was
|
|
going to be. It's kind of like being in the ocean. You can't really see how big that wave is,
|
|
you know the water is moving up towards you, but sometimes it's really foolish about how big
|
|
that wave is going to be, and I'm telling you, you're not seeing how big this wave is going to be,
|
|
it's going to be huge. People aren't going to need trucks, they're going to be able to print things
|
|
locally. It's been a revolutionized world. Get on board or move out of the way because they
|
|
ain't no stop them. Q3dprinter.com, that's Q as in question 3dprinter.com, $199 to a basic model,
|
|
I think it's $250 for the one with a bigger bet. And then the two best open-source things I
|
|
ever heard about because they're right here in my backyard. So there is a KC open hardware group.
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|
They don't have any regular meetings, but they have occasional events that they get together for,
|
|
and there's one coming up. Once again September, mid-September, there's 16 there,
|
|
whatever that Saturday is, and at the Kloppin Foundation, which is also the people who kind of
|
|
are the big sponsor for the mid-care fair. And so we're going to have an event there to discuss
|
|
open-source hardware and the ramifications of that. If you want more information, if you are in
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|
or are within driving distance of Kim City area, that's info at kcohg.org. That's kcprinter.cohg.org.
|
|
And that event is coming up. I'm really looking forward to that. And if you have any questions about that,
|
|
of course, you can get hold of me. And then I also met another young man at the
|
|
liquor fair who was burning people Linux CDs to try that on their systems at home. In fact,
|
|
while we were shipping, they were talking, he burned me a bode because I've been meaning to check
|
|
out bode, and I've never actually did the download and everything on it. So he burned me a bode
|
|
while we were talking. In fact, we talked a couple of times. He has started the Free and Libra
|
|
Open Source and Open Knowledge Association of Kansas. So that's www.openchances.us.
|
|
Opencances.us. The thing that really excites me is not only is this a Free and Open Source
|
|
kind of software to go with hardware of the other group. And it's been another person locally.
|
|
But he has a venue in Lawrence, Kansas, which I mentioned. It's just a little bit west of
|
|
Kansas City. And he started talking with me about this and we're trying to get together some
|
|
more people here who would be interested in doing this. And if we can get everything together,
|
|
at some point, and not too hopefully distant future, we're going to have ourselves our own
|
|
Linux and Open Source Linux Fest in the Missouri Kansas area. I'm sure it will not be a deep thing
|
|
like Ohio Linux Fest, maybe even ever, but at least we will have something that I don't have to
|
|
drive 10 plus hours to get there in order to have a Linux. Of course, this will be practically in my
|
|
backyard. That anybody in Nebraska, I meet these people from Nebraska and Arkansas and
|
|
that people from St. Louis were here at the Maker Fair again. All these makers come in from
|
|
other states because this is their only place to get everything together. I'm together,
|
|
together, and see what other people are doing. And I'm thinking that a Linux Fest in the
|
|
central states here in the Great Plains area will have a lot of people. I met people at Ohio
|
|
Linux Fest that had come from Missouri and from Iowa. This will be a shorter drive. So hopefully we're
|
|
going to have our app together and have more, and you'll hear that from a censure episode.
|
|
So then the last thing I want to talk about because really kind of the two open source things for
|
|
my highlight, including the fact that we might get together to get our together for a local
|
|
Linux Fest. But just on a personal note, you're a mentionist before what it talked about
|
|
Maker Fair. And it's continued on this year. There's a point where the Maker Fair kind of
|
|
slides over into the closest thing that we have to comment on in Kansas City. And this year,
|
|
like many previous years, there were some guys that have some very, very elaborate rock
|
|
Iron Man uniforms or aliens, you know, from a predator series, you know, with the dreadlocks
|
|
and things like that. There are several people who have lots of costumes that come and show off
|
|
their costuming skills and things like that. And they were of enforced, again, this year, and
|
|
the people with the predator suits actually were giving a talk. Apparently they had been somewhere
|
|
and got a chance to actually escort, kind of let these security guards, if you will, for Stan Lee
|
|
at a big con where they were. That sounds like fun. And then I saw them walking around and people
|
|
taking pictures with them and things like this. There's, as I say, there's this other,
|
|
I don't know if the same guys, different costumes are a different group, but they have Iron Man
|
|
costumes and one has big boom box built in the shoulders so they can turn on the boom box and
|
|
they can't turn around and people make videos and lots of picture-taking capabilities. And of
|
|
course, there's the Star Wars contingents. And they had people who were, there's a large
|
|
group of people who do Star Wars reneclet, if you will, you know that they have Stormtrooper,
|
|
you know, armor that they wear or Jedi Nikes and that kind of thing. And so they were there. That
|
|
contingent was there. So I was just after I went and walked around for all the outside things,
|
|
because there's such things that are outside, including architect this year. They finally found
|
|
the perfect place for architect, close enough to go over and hear them about Tornado's
|
|
away to not drown out everything that people were trying to talk in other places. And that was
|
|
outside a whole beautiful row of model A and model P4s, just very cool. If you are interested
|
|
at all in older automobiles, holy restored, beautiful. The guys who I was here again,
|
|
who were hotting up to this. Really, this has turned over the year here. It has turned
|
|
away from last year. They were racing little kids electric powered cars, you know,
|
|
little mini jeep that the four-year-old can drive. Well, they were full grown and sitting in these
|
|
and they increased the voltage for the batteries and make them go faster and then they were racing them.
|
|
Well, they were doing that this year, but really it's kind of turned into look stock car racing
|
|
goes here in the States. I don't know. I know the UK has its own touring car racing and I don't
|
|
know it. Touring car racing is more like real cars, but American stock car racing and American
|
|
drag racing. Most of the time, unless it's a real person racing, most of the professional racing cars
|
|
is the plastic body that's supposed to look approximately like that model of car, but underneath
|
|
there's nothing about the stock car. If not, you know, a stock car frame, it's not a stock car
|
|
engine, it's not a stock car suspension. It's like a racing car underneath the plastic body.
|
|
Well, it's kind of turned that way this year. A lot of those were obviously not the standard kids
|
|
underneath. It was if they kids plastic body on top of a frame that they had told themselves.
|
|
And it's really kind of scary and entertaining to watch them racing around because you know,
|
|
they're really almost burning up the engine with the voltage that they're doing and they're
|
|
getting to be really, really pretty high speeds. They're just beyond dangerous probably,
|
|
but it's fun to watch. And so they were there. And so I just done all this outward,
|
|
kind of a walk of run. It was going to be a hot day and I wanted to get that done early before it
|
|
was too hot. So I come back into the big lobby that is the lobby you would go in from the train
|
|
station. And I turn to their bikes and started walking over there because they had a lot of
|
|
that high school robotics competition that was all there. And I like to go by and talk to them
|
|
and some of the high schools or local high schools that I even know some of the people that are
|
|
involved and things like that. So I knew I wanted to go over and at least go by their booths,
|
|
you know, and commits a bit and things like this. Well, just as I got to the first booth,
|
|
there's a door that leads to some restaurants and other kind of, you know,
|
|
rooms that aren't, you know, they're beyond the actual lobby. And I guess some of the guys that
|
|
were changing in the stormtrooper costumes were just coming out of that door because they've
|
|
just gotten into their full-scale costumes that were coming out the door to go over to their
|
|
area where all those people were kind of gathering together. And so it was a perfect time,
|
|
the perfect place. And unlike so many times, I knew the perfect thing thing to say. So I stopped
|
|
and I looked at the two of them and I made a little hand gesture. You know the one I mean.
|
|
And I pointed over to the high school robotics groups and I said these are not the drawings
|
|
you are looking for. And they laughed and the guys from the booths who started laughing
|
|
they said that was just perfect. Anyway, so that was my highlight. So to show, I had to use my
|
|
Jedi make tricks on the stormtroopers. So that is my report on Make a Fair 2014.
|
|
And I know they are wanting shows. Maybe not one so long to try and edit this one back,
|
|
shows for heck of a little radio. So if you've done something like this, why don't you call in and
|
|
you tell us about something you have gone to that's all techier, dirty, something that has
|
|
people dressing up in. They have a movie, costumes, or doing interesting things, making things,
|
|
or things like that. And I'll look forward to hearing your show. But until then, this is Mr. Patents.
|
|
I'll be here from me soon. Not nearly as long as the drive between the last time I called in
|
|
a show. And until then, I'll be out here on the technological frontier, kind of blazing the trail,
|
|
finding interesting things, and marking the trail for you. And until we talk again next time,
|
|
remember, go out and do something to make something, do something. Bye now.
|
|
You've been listening to Heckapublic Radio at HeckapublicRadio.org. We are a community podcast
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