Our office will be closed on Monday September 7, we'll continue regular office hours on Tuesday at 0900 MST.
NYC: Yup, we're tired of the drizzly weather here in Western Canada and are packing up and heading East to the land of Cheesecake and subways. We're registered for the Open Source Hardware Summit and we're helping out at the Maker Shed at the Maker Faire. That, and we're going to do some sight-seeing. New York is supposed to be good for that sort of thing. We'll still have enough crew left here to keep things moving, but until we return (and Jeremy, the new R&D specialist starts work), support issues might be a bit delayed.
New Staff: Remember our job postings he had earlier in the summer? Jeremy's the result! Yaaay Jeremy! Another new hire is Jason, who's taking over IT duties for Eric who's gone back to University. Watching him wrap his head around all the various tasks we need to get done here has been amusing (keep up the good work, Jason).
In other news, we're excited about the new upcoming release of the new Arduino. Nothing to report specifically about it yet, but as some of the Arduino team will be at the OSH Summit and MakerFaire next week, I expect to have some new details about it shortly!
Pick and Place: We've got a 3rd pick and place machine! Here's the run-down:
"Daddy" is a Multitroniks MPS1030 we got on an excellent deal. Only problem is that this 6-camera, 6-head unit is a bit rare, and we only have a handful of parts feeders. No parts feeders = no parts can be loaded. So it's stored for the moment. But when we bought it, "For just the price of shipping..." they threw in a "broken-down unit in the corner". So we took it. That one's...
"Baby". A Multitroniks 2000LX. OLD, but with 8 feeders. We unleashed the interns on it, and 2 hours (and a $70 Ebay part later), it's a functional 1-head, 1-camera unit. Runs DOS software, which is functional but not very pretty. Well, finding more feeders was easy, because we found...
"Mama", which was a "Broken Multitroniks LVXII with 55 feeders" on auction. Won the auction, and about 20 man-hours later we've got it working too! Replace a bad power-supply in the on-board CPU case & fix some comm port issues, and we're back in business with a 2-head, 2-camera machine. With a bunch of feeders. Now to just learn the software! We've even started a Multitroniks Yahoogroups to keep tabs with the few other Multitroniks owners we've discovered so far.
Give us another month or two, and you'll see the first 2 new products designed to be used on these machines. We're excited about this - it's using robots to build robot-stuff!
MODKIT: We saw these Arduino MODKITs at the last Maker Faire in California. It's really neat - program your Arduino with a graphical interface. And these guys ain't slouches - they're got some serious talent behind it, but they're just a startup. We've supported several startups via a neat program called "KickStarter", and MODKIT has a fundraiser going on for another 2 weeks. Kick in a few dollars (or more) and invest in a really cool project that makes the open-source Arduino even more accessible!
Watch the Flickr feed - we'll be uploading pics from NYC there!
Our office will be closed on Monday September 7, we'll continue regular office hours on Tuesday at 0900 MST.
This is Gareth Branwyn's latest book on robotics. Why should you care? Well, our own Dave Hrynkiw (dat be me) was honoured with the task of tech-editting it. It's a fun read, with some BEAM and not-so-BEAM projects, so if you're a raw newbie to robotics, this belongs on your bookshelf next to "Junkbots, Bugbots […]
Solarbotics / Active-Tech Calgary Store Sale! Although we have a new website, we're still working on bringing over the inventory from Active-Tech into it. In the meanwhile, we're participating in the Active-Tech sale, with additional items from Solarbotics Ltd. Solarbotics_Active_Calgary_December_2019_Sale and come on by our store to take advantage of it until January 5 […]
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 […]
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Please visit www.P65Warnings.ca.gov for more information. This item was manufactured prior to August 31, 2018.