Tuesday, March 5, 2013

The maker movement has reestablished a connection with hardware that I think many of us had lost as things were mass produced and we no longer had to adjust the tension of tapes or exchange disk platters.  Somehow plugging and unplugging a disk drive is not the same.  I now have a serious soldering iron in my study and have breezed my way through several kits.  Haven't lost my soldering talent but I do have to use serious magnification when I do solder!

One of the tools that never leaves my pocket is is a Leatherman Squirt.  It is very handy when building kits, in fact I usually use it instead of going to my kit to get needle nose pliers.  It also has other attributes for the aging hacker.  If your hands are a bit sore after decades of emacs chording, the multitude of tools really helps from opening packages to prying lids.  As Jerry Pournelle would say, another aging hacker mainstay, highly recommended.

A future post will explore the interaction of STEM, the Maker movement, arduinos, rasp pis sensors, cosm and big data.  Later!

4 comments:

  1. Re: "I now have a serious soldering iron in my study and have breezed my way through several kits." I'd be very interested in what kits you worked through, why, and which ones you thought were the most enjoyable. Perhaps touching on your perspective as an "aging hacker" you could also highlight how your impression of various kits might differ from that of a younger hacker, say, someone who didn't ever experience the hassle of swapping floppies or building a PC from parts. Thanks!

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    1. I will describe the progression of kits I am plodding through. I also sponsored a few kickstarter projects. One board that should be a great and inexpensive building block for projects is from the LA Robotics club - http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/annikaskywalker/microprocessor-about-the-cost-and-size-of-a-pack-o . I will have more in a few daysthanks for your comments!

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  2. Ah the Leatherman...made it to the top of my daughter's Xmas wish list - right after the arduinos! A future aging hacker is clearly in the works...

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    1. Sounds terrific to me. Get her a Raspberry pi next!

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