Here's a link to a Smalltimes article where they interview Mark (and a few others) about using MEMS (or Micro Electromechanical Systems) in the toy industry. Read More...
Labour Day. Do be honest, I don't even know what the big deal is. I mean, most of society does it (labourizing) for a living. What's the big deal? Apparently we need to celebrate it. That's right, rejoice about that thing that we do practically every day. And the way we celebrate it, go figure, is to spend a day not doing the thing we're so excited about. Actually, to quote a source that's more knowledgeable than yours truly (ie, Wikipedia), Labour Day is "an annual holiday to celebrate the economic and social achievements of workers." You know, for establishing things like 8 hour working days. So Solarbotics and HVW Tech will be closed on Monday, September the 5th while we work a full 0 hour day. We'll be slaving away over such things as not work, so that when we reopen on Tuesday the 6th we can resume shipping orders and answering all the correspondence you can throw at us.
In other news, do you remember Matt's Pummer Flower video from last week? If you thought it was as cool as we did and want to build your own, he has now finished his Instructables project. If you're looking for a project to tackle over the long weekend, we suggest you go check it out.
In other news, we have a brief announcement from Yana, a wonderful coworker that handles a huge chunk of the content management and graphic design. She determined that the best way to get across some Netduino news was via an archeological-themed post. This is what she proposed we say:
"Rare as petrified sauropod vertebrae and beautiful as an aquatic salamander, the NetduinoPlus is back (in stock), as powerful and versatile as ever! Even fortune-telling using ground-up archaeological marvels will not tell us why these microcontroller artifacts are so rare, but it doesn't change the fact that here they are. Catch one (or two) while you can."
Now, unfortunately for Yana, at the age where most children were smitten with dinosaurs and critters and exploring for ancient ruins, I was smitten with a rather alarming fixation on Star Wars and its expanded universe. Still, I'll do the best I can to introduce this week's set of new items in an archeological approach.
/Clears throat
Hey man, did you hear about all those new items we got in from SparkFun? They're as awesome as all those bones they found. You know, the ones that were in the ground. Covered in old dirt and stuff. Unlike new items which are shiny and awesome, those old bones were... old. Like, really old. And they used to belong to some dinosaurs or prehistoric people. You know, like some homo erectus. They died a long time ago. From boredom, because they didn't have this SparkFun stuff to help them make their primitive tools used for hunting... Cantaloupe Antelope. And... Mammoth Bison Velociraptors. They probably hunted in packs and traveled single file. You know, to hide their numbers. But they weren't very precise with their blaster fire. As compared to, say, Imperial Stormtroopers.
/Cough
Wait, I can salvage this. Tuskan Raiders were framed by Imperial Stormtroopers, who commuted all the way from the Death Star, which fired lasers. And what do we have this week from SparkFun? Laser modules.
BAM! ON WITH THE SHOW!
So there we go. A brief exploration of Labour Day, an Instructables project, the Netduino back in stock via an archeological approach, and a failed (and rescued) analogy that lead into SparkFun goodies. What more could you want? What's that, a weekend? Fine, but just this once though.
Here's a link to a Smalltimes article where they interview Mark (and a few others) about using MEMS (or Micro Electromechanical Systems) in the toy industry. Read More...
Liquid Metal to Make Stretchable Electronics The elastic tech has huge potential for wearable tech, mobile devices, and even electronic "smart clothing." New Material Inspired by Geometric Patterns Inspired by the intricate geometries and repetitive patterns found in Islamic art, researchers at McGill University developed a material with new properties. (Via ZME Science) Kinematic Petals […]
Sooo, if you're not familiar with Make Magazine, you should be! An excellent quarterly "bookzine" from O'Reilly publishing - them guys that do the computer books with the ink-line drawings of animals on the cover. I'll be down there this April 22-23, giving BEAM lectures / workshops at their MAKE Faire in San Francisco, and […]
When it rains, it pours! We're addition to the IT position search (some good candidates BTW, thanks very much), we're now also looking for somebody to slide in behind the purchaser desk. Here's what the job entails: Watch stock levels (physical and in Quickbooks, because bits can't always be trusted over bytes), and reorder necessary […]
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Warning: This product contains chemicals known to the State of California to cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm.
Please visit www.P65Warnings.ca.gov for more information. This item was manufactured prior to August 31, 2018.