I’ve been coveting two tiny little robots. The Piccolo CNC by Diatom Studios and the Adafruit IoT “Internet of Things” mini printer.
There’s no word on a release date for the Piccolo, but you can get the Adafruit IoT here.
I’ve been coveting two tiny little robots. The Piccolo CNC by Diatom Studios and the Adafruit IoT “Internet of Things” mini printer.
There’s no word on a release date for the Piccolo, but you can get the Adafruit IoT here.
The other day I got sick and tired of my inbox getting daily e-mails from Fab.com. It’s a fine site, but I don’t need a daily e-mail from just about anyone. 1 Naturally, I sought out the unsubscribe link at the bottom of one of the daily e-mails and clicked. What I found was not the bland “Please confirm this unsubscription action.” page, but rather a “Oops! Perhaps we came on too strong! Sorry about that, how about we dial down the crazy just a tad? Would that do the trick? Listen, baby, we can work this out. Maybe just a few e-mails a week about things you might really REALLY like?” I’ve included a screenshot above, I loved this page so much. Heck, I loved it so much I closed the browser window and didn’t unsubscribe. 2
What I like about this page is that:
Here’s what I would do if I were over at Fab.com and helping6 in their e-mail marketing department:
Please take all of the above with a grain of salt. I’ve got a web based SaaS B2B business that would really benefit from more A/B testing and e-mail marketing, and I’m not doing it yet. :)
The other day I wondered what people have done with their InkShields. 1 2 Then I got to wondering what people were doing to mount their InkShield printer heads and move them around. Then I thought… hey! It would be pretty awesome to attach an InkShield printer head to a Polargraph / DrawBot gondola.
I could see how an InkShield might improve a Polargraph. You could theoretically have a small sensor to test the ink levels and pump more ink in from a larger reservoir – and never worry about a pen running out of ink again.
I could see how a Polargraph might improve an InkShield. With a DrawBot string setup, you wouldn’t need a huge or expensive XY gantry – just a lot of string, two motors, and some other bits and bobs.
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Last Monday I noticed a funny looking Google vehicle while driving back home from Palo Alto. 1 It was a white SUV with a big Google logo on the back passenger side door. Traffic was heavy and I didn’t get to look at the vehicle very long. I’ve seen the Google streetview car before – and this was not it. The streetview car has a tall device mounted on the roof with what appears to be four cameras pointing forward, right, left, and back. The vehicle I saw last Monday had a device the size of a small toaster mounted to the roof with four white pipes – and it was spinning very fast.
My guess was this was the Google self-driving car. When I saw this article the following day, picturing the exact vehicle I saw, I was certain.
I have to admit, when I saw this vehicle I was tempted, for just a moment, to drive slightly recklessly and unpredictably to see what Google’s vehicle would do. 2
My superego won out over my id, and I just observed the progress of the Google self-driving vehicle. I wish I had seen the vehicle earlier so that I could have observed more of the vehicle’s behavior from behind it. Here’s what I saw:
If Google can drive for 300,000 miles without an accident, including travel in heavy traffic, I suppose there’s a few lessons we can learn:
I had a lot of driving to do this last week. 1 For work I drove about 11 hours total on two separate days combined. Then, on Friday, I drove another 4 hours or so to visit some friends. Thankfully, driving back Saturday was only 3 hours.
Driving back at around dusk on Saturday meant lots of glare, lots of long shadows. And then it struck me… There must come a point when the Earth rotates relative to the Sun such that an object on the surface of the earth could cast an infinitely long shadow. And, really, this should happen twice a day.
Now I think I have a new mission. I need to find someplace on our planet to stand such that either at sunset or sunrise I would cast an infinitely long shadow.
I just fired up OpenSCAD, my 3D design program of choice, and then it occurred to me that it’s been quite a while since I’ve used it. A quick search for *.SCAD files on my hard drive revealed I haven’t updated any OpenSCAD documents since 5/13/2012. 1
That’s more than two months! How can this be?! I’ve got a pile of ideas stacking up.
How do you organize your ideas? I created an e-mail address for myself “ideas@DOMAIN.com,” jot down the ideas, and send them to myself constantly. If I have paper, I’ll sketch the idea out, take a picture, and e-mail the picture to this same address. I think I probably send myself about two or three e-mails a day.
I can’t wait to jump back into OpenSCAD and work on some of these ideas!!!
For not naming that last post “A watched plot.”
I cannot believe I let that joke slip through my fingers.
It’s been a while since I’ve talked about my DrawBot. In large part that’s because it’s been a while since I’ve even used my DrawBot.
After a little dry spell of making, I’ve been rocking the DrawBot. Previously I had been drawing things about the size of a sheet of paper. While this meant the drawings were relatively quick, it also meant I could just print whatever I wanted directly onto a 8.5″x11″ sheet of paper using my traditional black and white laser printer. This weekend I’ve cranked out a few drawings – but on a much grander scale. Several months ago I picked up a large roll of white paper at the local office supply store – and I’ve since created about three 3-foot tall drawings. One is a House Stark direwolf from Game of Thrones, one is an R2D2 commissioned by my daughter, and a third is an R2D2 and C3PO also at the request for my daughter.1
The last one is particularly cool. I’ll take a picture for you later. There’s a lot of room for improvement with the gondola. The current setup is… let’s say… non-optimal. I’m working on an improved version.
Where was I? Oh yes! The watched pot!
I’m using Sandy Noble’s seriously awesome Polargraph software to power my DrawBot. I’m rocking version 0.182 and noticed that when I’ve got the program on the “Input” tab it draws about 42 points a minute and when it’s on the “Queue” tab it draws about 96 points a minute when working on SVG / vector graphic. The cool part about drawing with the “Input” tab open is that you can see the drawing in progress. So, when I’m watching the drawing, it runs slower.
Default Series TitleI just read this super useful comparison test of four top-notch WordPress caching solutions. Since none of my websites have the kind of traffic that really warrants the optimal caching solution, it’s nice to know what that solution actually is. :)
Dear Google,
Your user policies apparently require anyone using Google Plus to provide proof of an established online identity or have my Google Plus account deleted. I have been using the name “MakerBlock” for two and a half years now. I probably have as many friends and acquaintances who know me by this, my chosen name, as I have friends and acquaintances who know me by the arbitrary name chosen for me. In fact, when it comes to an online identity, I’d say 99% of the people who know me don’t even know other names for me.
Here’s part of the problem with your online identify policies. I’m not trying to be mysterious. I’ve had online cyber stalkers before and, it is very likely I will again. It’s actually becoming a more frequent problem for people with professions similar to mine. If this website, my Twitter account, or my Google Plus profile became associated with my given name, I’d probably need to soon abandon one or more of them.
Aside from safety issues, there are other totally legitimate reasons I’d want to use a non-given name for any of these accounts. I do enjoy a little slice of anonymity and freedom that comes with not having the people I work with or for know about this website or online social networks. It’s nice to have a place to vent about work, employer, and/or client frustrations.
In any case, why do you even care about my given name? You know my IP address, which websites I own, you know where I live, probably all of my e-mail addresses. You are in my phone, have my credit card number, and know where I work. Why, for heaven’s sake, do you want to take this little piece away from me?
I have friends I would like to connect with through Google Plus, but associating Google Plus with my given name would essentially mean I wouldn’t be able to use Google Plus. Your policy notice indicated that if I don’t appeal by 7/11/2012 you’ll delete my account.
MakerBlock IS my name and if I can’t use it online for Google Plus then I guess you need to delete my Google Plus data.
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