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178 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1300
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Title: HPR1300: Maker Faire: Kansas City
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1300/hpr1300.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 23:11:06
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---
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Music
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Good morning. Good afternoon. Good evening. It is I, Mr. Jackson. It is the
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brotherable son back on the AgriPublic Radio. I don't know. In fact, he will be listening
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to this, but I like this element entirely for some, and there is a new one. But if I
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really get right, it may be sooner rather than later. But I have decided that this would
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be a good one to put on AgriPublic Radio, because it is about something that occurred
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in a bit kind of a report. And it really doesn't matter that the events has already occurred.
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It's just a give you an idea of what it would like to go to the event. And what kind of
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events are around you that you could do this kind of report? So that would be my challenge
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if you like this. Go to some AgriPublic Radio kind of an event. Go to some events that you
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know hackers would be interested in. And you know, put in your report of how all of that
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took place. And the event I'm talking about is MakerFair here in the Kansas City area.
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And this is going to be kind of a take-to, I guess. I don't know whether you're going to
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hear this one or the first time I try to call it in, but a lot of people say, go ahead
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and I don't think it got saved properly. So I'm trying it again.
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MakerFair here in Kansas City, this is the third annual full-size MakerFair that we've
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had. And I have had the opportunity to attend all three and to actually more actively participate
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in the last two. It's down in the central area of Kansas City by the old Union Station,
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the Union River Road Station. And they use that space both inside for lots and lots of
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different tables and groups and things with people showing things that they have made
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or things that you can make yourself as well as outside. They got interesting attractions
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there. And they even used space for lots of things that would be of interest to children
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and activities for kids at the MakerFair this year in the Science City, which is the local
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Science Museum, National History Museum, has a Science City that kind of is alongside
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the old train station. It's not actually inside the train station building. They built
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a new area right alongside of it that connects to the train station. So they had a lot of
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things for kids there, activities that could participate in and things like that. Lots and
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lots of things for kids and lots of children and their families that were coming by. This
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was a little biker this year, that it was last year because last year it was one of the
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hottest weekends of the year when MakerFair occurred, which it's been here for the last few
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years. And I'm hoping we'll continue to be the last weekend of June. And last year it was so
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very, very hot. One of the hottest summers we've had for quite a while and it was the hottest
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weekend. These stuff until that point and they have been one of the hottest weekends of the summer.
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So the people who were doing outside type of things, I really was worried about them because
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it was just so impressively hot. Also last year since they didn't do the things in the
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science city area and it was so hot outside and I think that's really made for everybody to
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be staying inside in the air condition building as much as possible. And it was very, very
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packed last year. It didn't seem as packed, although I imagine when the actual figures come out
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that the amount of it can be both probably people or surpassed last year's. But it was harder
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to actually get a real pulse of that because of the way it was spread out and probably more
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efficient in a manner. There were several different groups that were there. I was kind of there
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with the May KC group again to help out with that in whatever way I could. And there was also
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another hacker group, you know, there's hacker space here in Kim City called HammerState.
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Originally there was a group called CalTown Computer Congress and they never managed to get
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there on India. They're nice. They were doing things. But then somebody else opened the
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found this place, a slightly different part of town and opened up this HammerState site and
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it had more tools and things like that or making physical things. A lot of equipment meant that
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you may not understand how to run and they'd not be able to afford it. Your homework shop is
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available in that space. And the CalTown Computer people have kind of moved down and co-existed
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in that space. So you got your Peter guys, the software side of things, and you got guys
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building things there in the HammerState. Lots and lots of interesting projects. They have
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the biggest group of tables like things there with the HammerState people. And it was quite
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interesting, all the different things that they had that hacker had worked on. Of course, the
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unique maker fear is a lot about 3D printing because, you know, the maker revolution has a lot
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of 3D printing kinds of elements to it. And there were all different types of 3D printers that you
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could see. In fact, one day, the second day of the fair towards the middle of the afternoon,
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I overheard a couple walking by with their children and the wife said, oh, look, it's a 3D
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printer. And the husband said it's rare. And I was thinking to myself, really, I mean, you couldn't
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swing a dead cat and not get 2 or 3D printers. You know, it was a very target rinse environment.
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If you were interested in 3D printing. And I saw all different kinds of various designs
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of 3D printers. And that was a fascinating aspect of things. There were guys outside who have
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the 3D printers, as well as inside. It's considered the aspect of the head moving and the platform
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moving up and down for the 3D printers. There were a few that had the platform being the best being
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totally still. And the head being moved both back and forth in the X and Y axes, but also the Z axes.
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In fact, one group came up from the Arkansas area, Little Rock Arkansas group of hackers.
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And there was a company who is down there who came up and they had a person who came up
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along with them who had built this kind of spider-like. It was like a three-legged spider that
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looked like. And the three articulated arms would then move the head and the platform stay still.
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And it would build up the 3D object. That was certainly an interesting one.
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Although I told them that I thought that I would have dreams at my nightmares of the spider
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coming off of its old-fashioned and hushed-year as I have. Speaking of harm, you know, there
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was plenty of people who were talking about, you know, being able to have robots that, you know,
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3D printers like the front robots that had been replicate themselves. And somebody else's
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who was working on getting the robots to be more more intelligent. So like it's probably any
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make sure that you don't see it. You're seeing those beginning points where the robot
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looks like we'll end up just right at all. There was another group from the St. Louis area.
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And that was a pretty substantial tip for both the students. Little Rock is probably five,
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eight and six hours away. And St. Louis is at least four. And they came in there. There's
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another young man outside who had all kinds of interesting projects. A lot of things in terms
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of trying to aid people to have very specific abilities. And he lived in Nebraska. He said the
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closest really hacker space to him is two or three hours away. And he had come in just to be with
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people that could understand what it was he was talking about. Because nobody where he lived
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in Nebraska can really understand when he talked about the project. I thought that was interesting.
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The group from St. Louis and not only some very interesting things with 3D printers and things
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like that. But they also had a printing press where they were printing things. But they had hand
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made a physical press with years of pressing down. And they have made one of those remote control
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telepresence things that you're building with big gang theory. So you remember when Dr. Sheldon
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Super decided he couldn't leave the apartment. And so he had himself a robot telepresence
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device with a screen and a webcam. And they had built one of those. They were driving that around
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and things like that. That was fun. One of the diets in Hammer Space have built tube amplifiers.
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And that really really calls to me. He's got a very interesting design with text-shaped
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enclosures that are connected together with a central shell that are his speaker enclosures.
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And then those are made out of layered wood. And then he has on the sensor-wise shell
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is where he has his free tube circuit for his amplifier. And it was kind of a retro 60-2
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kind of thing that you could use to plug into your MPC player. And I just, oh man, that was really
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really interesting to be. One of the guys in the Hammer Space area also had a, he had
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recreationally the gearing mechanisms in parallel to like a lined up toy, this little bear
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that he walked around him. He's made a giant plastic version of that. And he had on a
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bed one day. I was really interested in this thing to be inmate. And he had a hand crank to be
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able to operate all the gears and everything and move the articulated legs. So he also had
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on this bed that have a tube on the bed. And I walked up to him and said, I'm really interested
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in your project. But I also think I need to join your launch. Because I think I already know
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one of the main chemons of your your launch brothers, which is that real electronic glow.
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So I got into the back of my mind that I and I may have started to tackle. Once I start
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building more electronic things, I'm going to have to tackle making myself a little tube amp.
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That would be fun. There was an internal, because a guy that had one of the singing
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Teflacoil outside. We had architect. The first year they tried architecture inside,
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nobody could hear anything while they did their show. Last year they put the house side now
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much better. This one you'd have a singing single small Teflacoil that he only did three things
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with the musical Teflacoil. So it wasn't too bad in terms of interrupting
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conversations. Metal Riddle, the interesting guy, his act, he does like Steve Trash, and he was
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a magician using recycled kinds of materials and things like that. He had a really cool
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cigar box guitar. And a really cool case, he had eight out there with the car box guitar,
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met him early in the morning on Saturday. And it was talking with him about his case,
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his guitar and everything like that. He had a really great act while him do his thing. And like
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that all recycled materials, so he kind of integrated a design environment message along with his
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act. And that was cool. Outside we had the amateur radio operators, which we had last year,
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had them again, because last weekend of June is when the amateur radio operators around the world
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practice their field day operations, which is emergency communication. So usually when you have
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any kind of emergency happening, the first people to establish communications from those emergencies
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are amateur radio operators. They're the first people to get the word out about how things are
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going in that area. Before the telephone companies can get everything up and running again,
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and the telephone companies can get the landlines going, the amateur radio operators can come in
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there and get information in and out of those areas that have natural disasters that take place.
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And this is kind of the weekend where they practice that. They go out and they work all off of
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battery power. And can this, if they have put up just for the purposes of field day, which runs
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from Friday afternoon until Saturday. And they do that overnight, even on the Friday night.
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That was going on there. And all kinds of interesting things outside. Some guys had taken the
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little electric kind of children's toys, the little ride-on kinds of things that are little
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jeeps and other kinds of vehicles. And they run off of six-volt or 12-volt gel cell batteries.
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And they had actually taken those and added more batteries and you know,
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done some work on the motors to make those run faster. They were actually racing them on the
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course that they set up. So, once again, we have the young people that were out. They make
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foam rubber kinds of arbor and have foam-covered weapons. And actually, our whacking, if each
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had a pretty hard one, could foam weapon. And it's not like at the A where you can get really hurt
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all that bad. And so, they were, I was worried about that last year when they were out there in the
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heat. This year was at least thankfully cooler for them. Every time they would parade through the
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inside, I like a bunch of barbarians and make a lot of noise and let everybody go to the favorite
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outside doing that kind of thing. And I think just overall, it was a great experience. It's my
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third one and I plan on being at the maker fair every year that they have it. And I think it's
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just a wonderful thing to get together with all these people who are interested in things that
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they can make, things that they have made. There was candy leather there showing kids how to work
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leather. There was another kid. I bought a print from him. Actually, I gave him a donation
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for a print and he had a print of a vacuum tube with the word make on it. I thought that was
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very, very cool. So, that little piece of art is going to go up at my cubicle at work.
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And it was just a great time. There were, you know, I run or my Linux shirts both days and people
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were commenting on that taking that was cool. There was even one group, a couple of young men from
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Kansas State University at Manhattan, Kansas. And they think they have an idea of being able to do
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3D printing with aluminum. Actually, using aluminum wire on a school. And I will be following closely
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their progress in that regard. So, that's my little report on Maker Fair KC. Hopefully,
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this time it takes. And you're listening to me talking to you right now. So, what kind of
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things do you have that you can go to? There was one group that I found out that there was a
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Comicon apparently here in Kansas City and they didn't even know it back in April. So, I'll probably
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be attending the Comicon and I will be reporting to you what it is that I saw and what it is that I
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did at the Comicon. And if you've got a Comicon or some other kind of geeky hacker interest kind of
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thing that you go to, go ahead and submit a report like this and let us know what you're doing in
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your particular area. But until then, this is Mr. Gettys and I will be signing off. And I'd like
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to remind you, if I ever start out my open shorts broadcast, this is how I would in every podcast
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making, you know, things out there and hackable hardware. And that is, I encourage you to go out
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there and do something to make something to do something. So, let me agree. This is Mr. Gettys,
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a B-0-Y-O, signing off and out here on the Technological Frontier by now.
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