Podcasts about hackerspaces

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Best podcasts about hackerspaces

Latest podcast episodes about hackerspaces

Hackaday Podcast
Ep 233: Chandrayaan on the Moon, Cyberdecks, Hackerspaces Born at a German Computer Camp

Hackaday Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2023 45:46


This week, Editor-in-Chief Elliot Williams and Kristina Panos experimented with the old adage that brevity is the soul of wit. That's right; this week, they're all Quick Hacks, and that's to make room for a special series of interviews that Elliot recorded at CCCamp with the pillars of US hackerspace creation. This one's really special, do have a listen. We still made room for the news this week: India launched Chandrayaan-3, which combines an orbiter, lander, and rover all in one. Then it's on to the What's That Sound results show, and while Kristina did not get it right, she did correctly identify it as being used in Whitney Houston's "I Wanna Dance With Somebody", as did one of the guessers who identified it as the cowbell sound from a Roland 808. Then it's on to the (quick) hacks, where we alternated for once just to keep things interesting. This week, Elliot is into 3D printing a clay extruder and then printing pottery with that, z-direction conductive tape, and the humble dipole antenna. Kristina is more into cyberdecks for the young and old, a reusable plant monitor, and 3D printing some cool coasters. Check out the links if you want to follow along, and as always, tell us what you think about this episode in the comments!

Paul's Security Weekly
PSW #762 - Ben Hibben

Paul's Security Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2022 163:01


Blenster comes on to talk about the Maker Movement, Hackerspaces, community and inclusive cultures, intentionality and kindness as a social cheat code, the right to repair movement, and using tools like the arduino/raspberry Pi to bring your projects to the next level!   In the Security News: last year's open source is tomorrow's vulnerabilities, RepoJacking, I feel like there will always be authenitcation bypass, super charge your hacking, do you have your multipath, RC4 and why not to use it, here's the problem with vulnerability scanners, packages and expired domains, initrd should not be trusted, Apple kernels, oh and did you hear there is a vulnerability in OpenSSL!   Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Visit https://securityweekly.com/acm to sign up for a demo or buy our AI Hunter! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly/ Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly   Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw762

Paul's Security Weekly TV
Blenster - Hacking Hardware - Ben Hibben - PSW #762

Paul's Security Weekly TV

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2022 71:54


Blenster comes on to talk about the Maker Movement, Hackerspaces, community and inclusive cultures, intentionality and kindness as a social cheat code, the right to repair movement, and using tools like the arduino/raspberry Pi to bring your projects to the next level!   Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw762

Paul's Security Weekly (Podcast-Only)
PSW #762 - Ben Hibben

Paul's Security Weekly (Podcast-Only)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2022 163:01


Blenster comes on to talk about the Maker Movement, Hackerspaces, community and inclusive cultures, intentionality and kindness as a social cheat code, the right to repair movement, and using tools like the arduino/raspberry Pi to bring your projects to the next level!   In the Security News: last year's open source is tomorrow's vulnerabilities, RepoJacking, I feel like there will always be authenitcation bypass, super charge your hacking, do you have your multipath, RC4 and why not to use it, here's the problem with vulnerability scanners, packages and expired domains, initrd should not be trusted, Apple kernels, oh and did you hear there is a vulnerability in OpenSSL!   Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Visit https://securityweekly.com/acm to sign up for a demo or buy our AI Hunter! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly/ Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly   Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw762

Paul's Security Weekly (Video-Only)
Blenster - Hacking Hardware - Ben Hibben - PSW #762

Paul's Security Weekly (Video-Only)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2022 71:54


Blenster comes on to talk about the Maker Movement, Hackerspaces, community and inclusive cultures, intentionality and kindness as a social cheat code, the right to repair movement, and using tools like the arduino/raspberry Pi to bring your projects to the next level!   Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw762

The Gate 15 Podcast Channel
The Gate 15 Interview EP 23. Leigh Honeywell: Hacker, Community Organizer and CEO at Tall Poppy

The Gate 15 Podcast Channel

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 70:39


Leigh is the founder and CEO of Tall Poppy, where she helps companies protect their employees from online harassment. She was previously a Technology Fellow at the ACLU's Project on Speech, Privacy, and Technology, and also worked at Slack, Salesforce.com, Microsoft, and Symantec. She has co-founded two hackerspaces - HackLabTO in the Kensington Market area in Toronto, and a feminist space called the Seattle Attic Community Workshop in Pioneer Square, Seattle. She is now a member and Chief Security Officer of Double Union, a feminist hackerspace in San Francisco, and she advises several nonprofits and startups. Leigh has a degrees from the University of Toronto where she majored in Computer Science and Equity Studies. Leigh points out that the latter major is about equity as in equality, not as in finance.  To learn more about Tall Poppy, visit the Tall Poppy website and connect on Twitter and you can follow and learn more about Leigh on Twitter: @HYPATIADOTCA and LinkedIn.  “tall poppy syndrome is a cultural phenomenon in which people hold back, criticize, or sabotage those who have or are believed to have achieved notable success in one or more aspects of life, particularly intellectual or cultural wealth-‘cutting down the tall poppy.' It describes a draw towards mediocrity and conformity. Commonly in Australia and New Zealand, ‘cutting down the tall poppy' is used to describe those who deliberately put down another for their success and achievements.“-via Wikipedia  In the discussion we address:  Leigh's background and the personal and professional progression that led her to found Tall Poppy  What Tall Poppy is doing to help protect individuals through personal digital safety  Hackerspaces, equity, diversity and women in cybersecurity  Leadership  Emerging issues in information security  Leigh's ever-colorful hair, CanRock, KiwiCon, and much more!  A few references mentioned in or relevant to our discussion include:  Tall Poppy website - https://www.tallpoppy.com Leigh mentioned KYC for crypto. For more on that see What Is KYC and Why Does It Matter For Crypto? (25 Mar 22) - https://www.coindesk.com/learn/what-is-kyc-and-why-does-it-matter-for-crypto/ Leigh spoke about device security and the threat of SIM swapping. Read more from this FBI IC3 Public Service Announcement, Criminals Increasing SIM Swap Schemes to Steal Millions of Dollars from US Public (08 Feb 22) - https://www.ic3.gov/Media/Y2022/PSA220208 CISA: Walk This Way to Enable MFA (05 May 22) - https://www.cisa.gov/blog/2022/05/05/walk-way-enable-mfa CISA Director Jen Easterly tweeting about #MFAMay and #MoreThanAPassword (05 May 22)  The Kelihos botnet campaign aimed at Apple iCloud accounts was mentioned. Here's a 2014 blog post from Symantec and a summary from the BBC - https://community.broadcom.com/symantecenterprise/communities/community-home/librarydocuments/viewdocument?DocumentKey=7273883f-edd4-46c6-a723-ab83ea0b8264&CommunityKey=1ecf5f55-9545-44d6-b0f4-4e4a7f5f5e68&tab=librarydocuments Andy mentioned another advocate for people and communities he's a fan of. Learn more about Matt Mitchell in The Gate 15 Interview: Matt Mitchell, a Champion for Security and Privacy (26 Apr 21)  Andy took the opportunity to put in a plug for the upcoming InfraGardNCR Cyber Camp (scheduled for 18-22 July!)  And Leigh and Andy gave some unsolicited promotions for 1Password, and Leigh also offered BitWarden as great options for password managers. Leigh also suggested reviewing the Consumer Reports and New York Times' Wirecutter for reliable reviews

Met Nerds om Tafel
S10E06 – Boetes voor WiFi-tracking en hackerspaces op de kaart zetten met Dave Borghuis

Met Nerds om Tafel

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2021 108:47


Dave Borghuis is eigenaar van TwenSpace, een 3D-print service in Enschede. Hij stond in 2017 en 2021 op de kandidatenlijst voor de Tweede Kamer namens de Piratenpartij, is oprichter van van hackerspace TkkrLab in Enschede en kostte de gemeente Enschede ooit een boete van 6 ton.We praten uitgebreid over hackerpaces, makerspaces en fablabs en hoe hij die met mapall.space op de kaart weet te zetten.Tijdschema00:00:00 Floris heeft een huis gekocht!00:03:22 Voorstellen: Dave Borghuis00:05:24 Een boete voor WiFi tracking in Enschede00:28:32 Vuurwapens 3D-printen00:41:50 Makerspaces, hackerspaces en fablabs00:59:50 Alle spaces op de kaart met mapall.space01:07:03 Vragen van de luisteraars01:19:09 Privacy versus de Coronacheck QR-code01:34:41 Tips01:45:55 Afkondiging01:48:14 Stem op Signaalwaarde!TipsRandal PeelenExporteer je 2FA codes en print zeRuurd SandersThe Kiffness op YouTubeSuper agent voor Safari iOS 15Dark Reader voor Safari iOS 15Airbuddy 2Before… Trilogy Simone Giertz op YouTubeFloris Diemel@maaikevhouten op TikTok@angryreactions op TikTok@julienolke op TikTok@vancityreynolds op TikTokDave BorghuisGebruik een password manager!Attack Surface van Cory Doctorow@doctorow (Cory Doctorow op Twitter)Cyberhelden podcastThingiverse voor 3D modellen tbv printenZie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Elucidations: A University of Chicago Podcast
Episode 132: Rebecca Valentine discusses queer hackerspaces

Elucidations: A University of Chicago Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2021 46:03


This month, we sit down with Rebecca Valentine (co-founder of Queerious Labs) to talk about anarchism, feminism, tech culture, and creative hacking. Hack this, hack that. What is a hacker, anyway? In pop culture, it’s common to use the term ‘hacker’ as a synonym for ‘cybercriminal’—that is, a person who engages in illegal activity over a computer network, usually involving gaining access to something they shouldn’t. But if you’ve ever spent any time in the tech community, you’ll know that there, the term is used in a very different way. It’s complicated to define precisely, but generally, ‘hacking’ involves taking apart a ready-made product in an exploratory way, whether to understand how it works, or to put it back together in a different, more customized way.We live in a world of mass-produced artifacts, each of which is manufactured in bulk to serve a specific purpose. But despite that fact, we are all individual people, many of whom want different things out of their artifacts. For example, maybe I have a car and want to give it my own paint job that it wouldn’t have gotten in the factory. Or maybe I have a handbag and would like to embroider a cool pattern on it. Those are simple examples, but our guest stresses that hacking often involves going further and subverting the original intentions behind the thing being hacked. For instance, there are people who have managed to get Alexa and Siri to talk to one another, each device responding in speech the way it would respond to a person. Neither was designed to talk to another device in English—rather, each was designed to provide a voice interface to a single human owner. The result can be pretty bizarre and interesting to listen to!In this episode, Valentine discusses why she founded Queerious Labs, a public nonprofit whose purpose is to encourage these sorts of tinker-y explorations. Most other spaces of this kind tend to be dominated by men, especially straight cisgender men, and often that can have the effect of alienating people who aren’t men, or who aren’t straight, or who aren’t cisgender. In addition, Queerious Labs is intended to be a friendly environment for people with socialist, anarchist, and feminist backgrounds. In the course of laying out how all those things hang together, we have the chance to dig in a wide range of topics, including political power, bottom-up vs. top-down organizational structures, mass culture, the patriarchy, natural language, theory vs. anti-theory, and how gender roles are in flux across time and history. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Digital leben
Podcast "Digital leben" – Folge 34: Makerspace in Sachsen-Anhalt

Digital leben

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2020 48:38


Makerspaces, Hackerspaces, Mitmachwerkstatt – all das gibt es in Sachsen-Anhalt: Das Eigenbaukombinat in Halle und die Macherburg in Magdeburg. Makerspaces wollen jedem Einzelnen helfen. Und sie haben auch eine Mission.

Bucle Infinito
66 - ¿Qué es un Makerspace?

Bucle Infinito

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2020 39:05


Matto se está planteando abrir un Makerspace para poder desarrollar todos sus proyectos. Aquí te explicamos en qué consiste, cuales son los pros y los contras. Links de interés Como es un makerspace por dentro: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nsiYTBQpIJ8 Definición de Makerspace: https://www.makerspaces.com/what-is-a-makerspace/ Makespace Madrid: https://makespacemadrid.org/ Medialab Prado: https://www.medialab-prado.es/ Hackerspaces: https://hackerspaces.org/ Contacto No dejes de seguirnos en Twitter: @bucleinf Ayúdanos a seguir: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/bucleinfinito

matt o makerspace hackerspaces medialab prado
Journeys in Podcasting
22 Wiktor Przybylski and Jakub Kowalik on What Hackerspaces Offer that Work and School Do Not

Journeys in Podcasting

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2019 21:31


Wiktor Przybylski and Jakub Kowalik run Hackerspace Krakow and here they discuss the freedoms of learning in a Hackerspace compared to work and school environments.

InsecureSpace
Tech talks, hackerspaces & cheap arduino hacks

InsecureSpace

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2019 84:17


One of those episodes where we don't have one main topic, but just talk about stuff we like to share. Davids Talk Kodys projects: Chicken man Game AirDuino Fireworks DigiTrack

Libre Lounge
Episode 24: Hackers and Hackerspaces with Mitch Altman

Libre Lounge

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2019


What are Hackers? What are Hackerspaces? What makes us feel a sense of purpose and belonging? What are the origins of the term Open Source and Maker, and what do they have to do with one another? Mitch Altman brings clarity on all these topics and more when he joins Chris and Serge for this episode of Libre Lounge!Links:Cornfield Electronics (Mitch's website)TV-B-GoneHackerspaces.org2600 MagazineOff the Hook Radio ShowChaos Communication ClubNovena ComputerSoldering is Easy

magazine maker hackers open source serge soldering hackerspaces mitch altman tv b gone
Libre Lounge
Episode 24: Hackers and Hackerspaces with Mitch Altman

Libre Lounge

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2019


What are Hackers? What are Hackerspaces? What makes us feel a sense of purpose and belonging? What are the origins of the term Open Source and Maker, and what do they have to do with one another? Mitch Altman brings clarity on all these topics and more when he joins Chris and Serge for this episode of Libre Lounge!Links:Cornfield Electronics (Mitch's website)TV-B-GoneHackerspaces.org2600 MagazineOff the Hook Radio ShowChaos Communication ClubNovena ComputerSoldering is Easy

magazine maker open source serge soldering hackerspaces mitch altman tv b gone
Libre Lounge
Episode 24: Hackers and Hackerspaces with Mitch Altman

Libre Lounge

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2019


What are Hackers? What are Hackerspaces? What makes us feel a sense of purpose and belonging? What are the origins of the term Open Source and Maker, and what do they have to do with one another? Mitch Altman brings clarity on all these topics and more when he joins Chris and Serge for this episode of Libre Lounge!Links:Cornfield Electronics (Mitch's website)TV-B-GoneHackerspaces.org2600 MagazineOff the Hook Radio ShowChaos Communication ClubNovena ComputerSoldering is Easy

magazine maker open source serge soldering hackerspaces mitch altman tv b gone
InsecureSpace
Mass Surveillance, Hackerspaces and New Projects /w Kody Kinzie

InsecureSpace

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2019 142:49


After another longer pause, we're trying a new approach by inviting guests more frequently. Which is why Kody joined us to chat about a lot of stuff, like DefCon, surveillance in the US, more WiFi flaws, projects, hackerspaces and how to build a community.

Freak Show
FS231 Marmorkuchenstadt Hommelbach

Freak Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2019 245:57 Transcription Available


Die letzte Sendung vor Tims Abreise nach Barcelona bringt noch einen neuen Gast in die Runde: wir begrüßen Sabine aka. @bleeptrack und sprechen viel über ihre zahlreichen Hackereien und Erkläereien auf YouTube und ihr Engament bei Jugend hackt und anderen Initiativen und Hackerspaces. Dabei kommen wir gewohnt vom Hölzchen aufs Stöckchen und schaffen wieder unsere vier Stunden. Viel Spaß damit.

Journeys in Podcasting
14 Epunk of C-Base on the Mothership of all Hackerspaces

Journeys in Podcasting

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2019 28:00


Epunk of C-base, the mothership of hacker spaces dedicates a part of his afternoon to discuss the GDPR and data privacy issues, crowdsourced environmental pollution monitoring projects, and open source education outreach projects.  Epunk explains the philosophy of the mothership, how hacker spaces are continuing a century old tradition of universities in keeping information free for all.  This is a great introduction to the future of alternative learning spaces.

Libre Lounge
Episode 3: Hacker Culture, Past, Belonging and Inclusion

Libre Lounge

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2018


In this episode of Libre Lounge, Serge and Chris go back to the roots of hacker culture starting in the 1950s and 1960s and connecting that with the hacker culture of today, its challenges and how it needs to evolve moving forward.Show links:Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution by Steven Levy (stevenlevy.com)Free as in Freedom (sagitter.fedorapeople.org)Programming is Forgetting: Toward a New Hacker Ethic (opentranscripts)The Problem with the Hacker Mystique (youtube)Eric Raymond's Jargon File (catb.org)The Original Jargon File (dourish.com)Hackerspaces (hackerspaces.org)Maker Movement (wikipedia)MAKE Magazine (makezine.com)Life hack (wikipedia)CW Chris's article on depression (dustyweb)CW Mitch Altman on Geek and Depression (bluehackers.org)CW Jason Scott on Geeks and Suicide (textfiles.com)The Microsoft Ad (ispot.tv)Poochie (simpsons.wikia.com)Wargames (wikipedia)Hackers (wikipedia)For the Love of Hacking (forbes)RepRap (reprap.org)Makerbot goes Proprietary (cnet)The Illegal Tattoo (treachery.net)A Portrait of J. Random Hacker (catb.org)

Libre Lounge
Episode 3: Hacker Culture, Past, Belonging and Inclusion

Libre Lounge

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2018


In this episode of Libre Lounge, Serge and Chris go back to the roots of hacker culture starting in the 1950s and 1960s and connecting that with the hacker culture of today, its challenges and how it needs to evolve moving forward.Show links:Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution by Steven Levy (stevenlevy.com)Free as in Freedom (sagitter.fedorapeople.org)Programming is Forgetting: Toward a New Hacker Ethic (opentranscripts)The Problem with the Hacker Mystique (youtube)Eric Raymond's Jargon File (catb.org)The Original Jargon File (dourish.com)Hackerspaces (hackerspaces.org)Maker Movement (wikipedia)MAKE Magazine (makezine.com)Life hack (wikipedia)CW Chris's article on depression (dustyweb)CW Mitch Altman on Geek and Depression (bluehackers.org)CW Jason Scott on Geeks and Suicide (textfiles.com)The Microsoft Ad (ispot.tv)Poochie (simpsons.wikia.com)Wargames (wikipedia)Hackers (wikipedia)For the Love of Hacking (forbes)RepRap (reprap.org)Makerbot goes Proprietary (cnet)The Illegal Tattoo (treachery.net)A Portrait of J. Random Hacker (catb.org)

Libre Lounge
Episode 3: Hacker Culture, Past, Belonging and Inclusion

Libre Lounge

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2018


In this episode of Libre Lounge, Serge and Chris go back to the roots of hacker culture starting in the 1950s and 1960s and connecting that with the hacker culture of today, its challenges and how it needs to evolve moving forward.Show links:Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution by Steven Levy (stevenlevy.com)Free as in Freedom (sagitter.fedorapeople.org)Programming is Forgetting: Toward a New Hacker Ethic (opentranscripts)The Problem with the Hacker Mystique (youtube)Eric Raymond's Jargon File (catb.org)The Original Jargon File (dourish.com)Hackerspaces (hackerspaces.org)Maker Movement (wikipedia)MAKE Magazine (makezine.com)Life hack (wikipedia)CW Chris's article on depression (dustyweb)CW Mitch Altman on Geek and Depression (bluehackers.org)CW Jason Scott on Geeks and Suicide (textfiles.com)The Microsoft Ad (ispot.tv)Poochie (simpsons.wikia.com)Wargames (wikipedia)Hackers (wikipedia)For the Love of Hacking (forbes)RepRap (reprap.org)Makerbot goes Proprietary (cnet)The Illegal Tattoo (treachery.net)A Portrait of J. Random Hacker (catb.org)

Logbuch:Netzpolitik
LNP260: Eine Hausdurchsuchung kommt selten allein

Logbuch:Netzpolitik

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2018 134:08 Transcription Available


Eine Welle von Hausdurchsuchungen erfasste in den letzten Wochen die freiheitsorientierte Netzszene. Mit zweifelhafter Argumentation und Vorgehensweise ritt die Polizei in Augsburg, Jena, Berlin und Düsseldorf bei Privatpersonen, privaten Infrastruktur-Providern und Hackerspaces ein. Wir sprechen mit Moritz Bartl von den Zwiebelfreunden und Steffen von Systemausfall darüber, wie das ganze abgelaufen ist und diskutieren ausführlich, wie man sich im Falle von Hausdurchsuchungen verhalten sollte.

Kurz informiert – die IT-News des Tages von heise online
Kurz informiert vom 17.05.2018: Netzneutralität, Militär-Projekt Maven, YouTube Music, Fablabs

Kurz informiert – die IT-News des Tages von heise online

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2018


US-Senat stimmt für Netzneutralität Verfechter der Netzneutralität in den USA feiern einen Etappensieg: Der US-Senat hat mit den Stimmen der Demokraten und dreier Republikaner beschlossen, die Aufhebung der Netzneutralität durch die Regulierungsbehörde FCC rückgängig zu machen. Damit das aber tatsächlich erreicht wird, müssen auch das Repräsentantenhaus und der US-Präsident mitziehen. Im Repräsentantenhaus müssen die Demokraten allerdings 25 Republikaner dazu bewegen, gegen die Parteilinie zu stimmen. Am Ende könnte US-Präsident Donald Trump noch mit einem Veto verhindern, dass die Netzneutralität erhalten bleibt. Wissenschaftler protestieren gegen Google Mitarbeit an Militär-Projekt Aus Protest an der Beteiligung Googles am US-Militär-Projekt Maven springen mehr als 830 Wissenschaftler den protestierenden Google-Mitarbeitern in einem offenen Brief an die Konzernführung zur Seite. Darin kritisieren die Unterzeichner, dass Googles KI-Technik dazu verwendet werden könnte, künftig Ziele automatisch und ohne menschliche Begutachtung auszusuchen. Google und Alphabet sollen sich verpflichten, zukünftig keine militärischen Technologien mehr zu entwickeln und keine persönlichen Daten von Nutzern für militärische Operationen zu benutzen. Google startet eigenen Streaming-Dienst Neue Konkurrenz für Spotify und Apple Music: Google hat seinen Musik-Streaming-Dienst YouTube Music vorgestellt. Er geht am kommenden Dienstag zunächst in den USA online und kostet in der werbefreien Premium-Variante rund 10 Dollar im Monat; Deutschland soll "bald" folgen. Die Suchfunktion soll auch Songs finden, die der Nutzer sehr vage umschreibt – etwa mit "dieser Hipster-Song mit dem Pfeifen"; auch Fragmente von Songtexten lassen sich eintippen. Neues aus den Fablabs und der Makerszene Während sich die Make-Redaktion gerade auf die Maker Faire Berlin vom 25. bis 27. Mai im FEZ Berlin vorbereitet, sind auch die Hackerspaces und Fablabs fleißig. Neben verschiedenen Hacking-Wochenenden geht es dieses Jahr verstärkt nach draußen, auf die Camping-Plätze. Eine Übersicht aller wichtigen Maker-Termine in diesem Sommer finden Sie auf heise.de/make Diese und alle weiteren aktuellen Nachrichten finden Sie auf heise.de

LAB Radio
Ep 4 Radical Decentralization and Hackerspaces [WCEF 2018 Coverage]

LAB Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2018 33:06


Chelsea Palmer is a mega curious academic, activist and passionate decentralist. What is a decentralist you might ask? Well, it's someone who espouses the values of decentralization and Chelsea is it. (She also does rap around Technology and other open sourced philosophies) With humble beginnings in the northeast USA, Chelsea eventually moved to Vancouver where she is helping run DCTRL, a decentralized hackerspace, located in British Colombia, Canada. As stated on the DCTRL Meetup: "We are a Collaborative Community inspired by the ideas behind Bitcoin, Decentralization, and the Open Source movement." Ready to become a decentralist? Great! After listening to this episode you will learn: What is Decentralization? What is DCTRL and how do they preserve the principles of Decentralization? How Decentralization is kind of like Burning Man What is the Blockchain and how does that fit in with Decentralization? Why Decentralization scares people yet offers unprecedented freedom? What excites and concerns Chelsea about the future of the ecosystem For show notes and more please visit: https://coinstructive.com/lab-radio/

1337@kultur:~$
Folge 49: Daheim im dritten Raum: Hackerspaces

1337@kultur:~$

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2015 122:05


Wir erläutern erst mal, was Hackerspaces sind und stellen dann auch ein paar vor, denn an Beispielen wird am besten deutlich, wie vielfältig das Konzept ist. Dabei geht es auch um Fablabs und ähnliches, denn wir gehen von einem sehr weiten Hackerspace-Begriff aus.

Hackerfunk
HF-089 - WLAN

Hackerfunk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2015 173:00


Die langjährigen Hörer werden sich erinnern, dass WLAN schon mal Thema war, nämlich in der Nullnummer des Hackerfunks, wobei der damals im Jahre 2006 noch gar nicht so hiess. Nach neun Jahren war es aber Zeit für ein Update. Zusammen mit Frank Hofmann mäandern wir durch das weite Feld der drahtlosen Vernetzung und streifen dabei auch noch Dinge, wie Powerline. Trackliste Bacter – Funkemistric Singleton – Breathe in breathe out DaXX – Hard to rock Das Buch :: Debian-Paketmanagement-Buch LUG Berlin :: Linux User Gruppen in Berlin Hackerspaces :: Hackerspaces auf der ganzen Welt Kafi vs. Mate :: Coffeestats IEEE 802.11 :: IEEE 802.11 Protokolle rund um WLAN Ronja :: Richtverbindungen per Laser regdbdump :: Tool für Linux um die WLAN Ländereinstellungen anzuzeigen Fraktalantennen :: Fraktalantennen für Kleinstgeräte ISM-Band :: Industrial, Scientific and Medical Band Frequenzbelegung BAKOM :: Frequenzbelegungsplan beim Bundesamt für Kommunikation WLAN Weltrekord :: WLAN Weltrekordsverbindung über 304 km OpenWLANMap :: Offene Datenbank von WLAN Hotspots zur Navigation OpenWLANMap Äpp :: Äpp für OpenWLANMap bei F-Droid Wireless Geographic Logging Engine :: Offene WLAN Hotspotkarte und Statistiken WPS :: Wi-Fi Protected Setup Reaver WPS :: Brute force attack against Wifi Protected Setup Freifunk :: Offenes WLAN für alle in Deutschland Openwireless :: Offenes WLAN für alle in der Schweiz Funkfeuer :: Offenes WLAN für alle in Österreich Fonera :: Offenes WLAN für alle mit Fon UPC Wi-Free :: Offenes WLAN für alle mit UPC-Cablecom Anschluss Linux Presentation Day :: Linux Presentation Day in Berlin Open Tech Summit :: Open Tech Summit in Berlin File Download (173:00 min / 175 MB)

Hackerfunk
HF-089 - WLAN

Hackerfunk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2015 173:00


Die langjährigen Hörer werden sich erinnern, dass WLAN schon mal Thema war, nämlich in der Nullnummer des Hackerfunks, wobei der damals im Jahre 2006 noch gar nicht so hiess. Nach neun Jahren war es aber Zeit für ein Update. Zusammen mit Frank Hofmann mäandern wir durch das weite Feld der drahtlosen Vernetzung und streifen dabei auch noch Dinge, wie Powerline. Trackliste Bacter – Funkemistric Singleton – Breathe in breathe out DaXX – Hard to rock Das Buch :: Debian-Paketmanagement-Buch LUG Berlin :: Linux User Gruppen in Berlin Hackerspaces :: Hackerspaces auf der ganzen Welt Kafi vs. Mate :: Coffeestats IEEE 802.11 :: IEEE 802.11 Protokolle rund um WLAN Ronja :: Richtverbindungen per Laser regdbdump :: Tool für Linux um die WLAN Ländereinstellungen anzuzeigen Fraktalantennen :: Fraktalantennen für Kleinstgeräte ISM-Band :: Industrial, Scientific and Medical Band Frequenzbelegung BAKOM :: Frequenzbelegungsplan beim Bundesamt für Kommunikation WLAN Weltrekord :: WLAN Weltrekordsverbindung über 304 km OpenWLANMap :: Offene Datenbank von WLAN Hotspots zur Navigation OpenWLANMap Äpp :: Äpp für OpenWLANMap bei F-Droid Wireless Geographic Logging Engine :: Offene WLAN Hotspotkarte und Statistiken WPS :: Wi-Fi Protected Setup Reaver WPS :: Brute force attack against Wifi Protected Setup Freifunk :: Offenes WLAN für alle in Deutschland Openwireless :: Offenes WLAN für alle in der Schweiz Funkfeuer :: Offenes WLAN für alle in Österreich Fonera :: Offenes WLAN für alle mit Fon UPC Wi-Free :: Offenes WLAN für alle mit UPC-Cablecom Anschluss Linux Presentation Day :: Linux Presentation Day in Berlin Open Tech Summit :: Open Tech Summit in Berlin File Download (173:00 min / 175 MB)

Brakeing Down Security Podcast
2015-013-Hackerspaces and their sense of community

Brakeing Down Security Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2015 49:52


We invited the organizers of the "TheLab.ms", a Dallas, Texas based hacker/makerspace on the podcast to talk about why they wanted to start a makerspace, the costs and plans to setup a hacker space, and some of the things you can do with a makerspace. We also understand the sense of community and the learning environment gained from these places.  If you are looking to start a 'space in your area, or looking to understand why they are needed in a community, you'll want to listen to Roxy, Sean, and Jarrod talk about the highs and lows and even some of the gotchas in setting up a space.

texas community sense jarrod hackerspaces thelab
Radical Personal Finance
164-An Introduction to Hackerspaces and Makerspaces: Interview with Jessica Fong, President of the South Side Hackerspace in Chicago

Radical Personal Finance

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2015 36:33


Years ago I heard of the concept of a hackerspace/makerspace. In essence, a hackerspace is a community-operated physical place where people can meet and work on their projects. But, the work that can come out of those spaces is far more impressive than that description makes it sound like. I've wanted to bring you the concept but since I'm not an expert, I needed to do it in the context of an interview. I was thrilled when a listener of the show recommended that I interview Jessica Fong, president of the South Side Hackerspace in Chicago. In the show, Jessica shares details on: What hackerspaces are and some of the great things that have emerged from them. How their organization was started. Advice for others interested in founding such a venture. Enjoy the interview! Joshua Links: South Side Hackerspace, Chicago Hackerspaces.org

We Build SG LIVE
Special 002 Spirit of invention and educating people through hackerspaces with Mitch Altman

We Build SG LIVE

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2014


Introduction [0:39] NoiseBridge TVBGone NEOTENY SINGAPORE CAMP (NSC1) Joi Ito MIT Media Lab hackerspaces HackerspaceSG OMG Protyping Lab XPC @ Homefix IDA Labs Singapore Maker Festival Smart Nation Initiative spirit of invention [11:24] TVBGone madlab Hackerspace in Detroit Hive 4A in Allentown NoiseBridge Chaos Communication Camp 2007 educating people through hackerspaces [31:06] hackerspaces NoiseBridge Classes Advanced Digital Prjects Lab at University of Illinois Music Synthesizer Digital Signal Processing Fourier Series I/O Polling audience questions [38:40] The sound of a dialup Wire Gauge TVBGone Schematics TVBGone Pro Rapid Fire questions [52:37] In the Absence of the Sacred: The Failure of Technology Python Ruby-Lang Raspberry Pi Chaos Communication Congress Chaos Computer Club Lumera Kickstarter The Medellin Interactive Museum HackBo Hackerspace in Bogota Picks [57:48] National Design Center Santiago Makerspace Icecast SoundPlant Happy Cow Mitch’s Flickr ElectroDroid Event Loop - Local events [1:01:37] 31C3 HOPE NoiseBridge Electric Plug – Connect with Mitch [1:03:34] Cornfield Electronics Cornfield Electronics Projects Mitch’s Flickr Mitch’s Twitter Mitch’s Instructables

SecurityCast
Hackerspaces

SecurityCast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2014 142:21


[SecurityCast] WebCast #12 - Hackerspaces

hackerspaces
We Build SG LIVE
023 Community based sensor projects and running hackerspaces with Roland Turner

We Build SG LIVE

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2014


Introduction [0:33] HackerspaceSG JFDI community based sensor projects [3:25] MEMS Iotera McThings Fitbit Activity Tracker Bluetooth Low Energy Singtel L!felabs Sigfox Sigfox Power Requirements Weightless Sigfox Parking Sensor yahi Cyclone Dust Sensor Low cost dust Sensor PUB Water Sensor Passive Infrared Sensors Jevon’s Paradox Big Data Weather System Modeling Time series data Unsupervised Learning running hackerspaces [23:13] HackerspaceSG yahi Singtel L!felabs Sigfox 12Geek JFDI Viki Humanist Meetup Blink Blank I/O Polling audience questions [34:05] PM2.5 Scatter Plot Yahi Map Rapid Fire questions [43:27] Linus Torvalds JFDI Openhouse SparkCore Feedly Microduino Doubly Linked List - New releases [46:33] Slides Cities at Night ISEE3 ISEE3 Reboot ISEE3 Reboot Kickstarter Arecibo Dish Hydrazine Hackerspaces in Space Event Loop - Local events [55:34] UXSG Front End Developers Singapore Reboot Electric Plug – Connect with Roland! [56:37] Roland’s Website

Teahour
#54 - 和小波一起聊聊 Maker 和开源硬件

Teahour

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2014 58:57


本期的话题 伴随着 Arduino 和 Raspberry Pi 在中国的普及和兴起, Maker 成为一个炙手可热的话题。这一期节目我们就有幸请到 Maker 社区的小波,和大家一起聊聊中国的 Maker社区 和开源硬件。 Seeed Studio Adafruit Sparkfun 创客 espruino mruby-arduino Maker Faire Bay Area Maker Faire Shenzhen Adafruit learn 柴火创客空间 上海新车间 北京创客空间 激光打蚊子 全球 HackerSpace / MakerSpace 汇总 Red Pitaya 开源机器人 开源汽车 Special Guest: 小波.

maker raspberry pi arduino adafruit sparkfun hackerspaces seeed studio maker faire bay area
Gigabit Nation
Hack to the Future: Why Hackerspaces Are Spark Plugs for Your Broadband Economy

Gigabit Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2014 60:00


Every community needs a hackerspace or two. This hot trend can easily add a low-cost, high-impact spark to a struggling neighborhood, or accelerate the economic impact of your broadband network. The hackerspace movement can even provide a pathway to affordable health insurance. Gina Lujan, Founder of HackerLab in Sacramento, CA, explains how to easily start and maintain a viable hackerspace. You don't need much: an empty building or office space, electricity, some paint, a few tables and chairs - and a decent Internet connection, the faster the better. Invite people with good ideas, a dream and basic tech skills to bring their laptops.  Gina outlines the key to success, some do's and don't's, strategies for funding and why letting the members run the show is the secret sauce that's making hackerspaces a winner across the U.S. She also lays out the basics for making hackerspaces a major element of broadband adoption strategies, and lets listeners know about a program that enables hackerspace participants to get lop-of-the-line healthcare at affordable rates.   

We Build SG LIVE
010 Building hackerspaces and running a hardware e-commerce business for geeks with Luther Goh

We Build SG LIVE

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2014


Introduction LinuxNUS HackerspaceSG 12Geeks Building Hackerspaces Hackerspace Hackerspace.org Arduino RaspberryPi RaspberryPi & Co Singapore NYC Resistor HackerspaceSG Calendar Hackerspace Mailing List Hackerspace Seoul Hackerspace Saigon Hackerspace Tokyo Makerspace Santiago Dim Sum Labs Running a hardware e-commerce business for geeks Maker Movement Adafruit Flora Lilypad Makey Makey Hackerspace Camera I/O Polling audience questions Freecycle SGFreecycle Team Fortress 2 Rapid Fire questions Python git Debian Foundation Doubly Linked list - New releases GulpJS Intel Edison Internet of Things Flexible Electronics Event Loop - Local events Smashing Magazine Pycon APAC Meta Refresh Red Dot Ruby Conf Ruby Conference Philipines Electric Plug – Connect with Luther! Luther’s Twitter HackerspaceSG Twitter HackerspaceSG Facebook

Creative Commoners
Episode 111: Hackerspaces

Creative Commoners

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2013 41:57


Wherein we peek inside the hackerspaces and makerspaces to explore this growing worldwide movement for makers, creators, tinkerers, and entrepreneurs. Elsewhere, Corey builds an instrument of doom, Chris makes plans to invade the Pacific Northwest, Allison pines for a sleek industrial kitchen, and Penn Jillette stops by the studio for a few minutes. Theme music by Latché Swing.

Staatsbürgerkunde

Hackerspaces für Kinder und Jugendliche – das waren aus meiner Sicht die "Stationen Junger Naturforscher und Techniker", die es quer übers Land verteilt in vielen Städten der DDR gab. Es wurde gebastelt, gebaut, konstruiert, geforscht und experimentiert. Unter der Anleitung von Experten und Praktikern konnten die jungen Forscher_innen spielerisch und fernab vom Schulunterricht in verschiedenen Arbeitsgemeinschaften Neues lernen. Mein Gast heute ist Volker Schramm, der 1976 als AG-Leiter für den Bereich Elektronik zur Station in Lübbenau kam und bis heute mit an Bord ist. Ich spreche mit ihm über das Konzept der Stationen, wie er überhaupt zur Station kam und was es dort alles zu tun und zu erleben gab. Und wir betrachten auch die Zeit nach der Wende, in der die Station Lübbenau dann zur "Technikschule clever inside" wurde. Vielen Dank auch noch einmal besonders an Frank, der mich auf der re:publica angesprochen hatte und dem ich die Idee zu dieser Folge verdanke. Er hat auch den Kontakt zu "Schrammi" hergestellt und hat auch einen besonderen Auftritt in dieser Folge. Da müsst ihr aber bis zum Schluss dranbleiben.

Spectrum
Mitch Altman

Spectrum

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2012 30:00


Inventor and self-described hacker Mitch Altman talks about Noisebridge, the San Francisco hackerspace he co-founded. Altman is responsible for co-founding 3-ware is now the President and CTO of Cornfield Electronics. His many inventions include TV-B-Gone and NeuroDreamer sleep mask.TranscriptSpeaker 1: Spectrum's next Speaker 2: [inaudible]. Welcome to spectrum the science and technology show on k l x Berkeley, a biweekly Speaker 1: 30 minute program bringing you interviews, featuring bay area scientists and technologists as well as a calendar of local events and news. Speaker 3: Good afternoon. My name is Brad Swift on today's show. Rick Carnesi and I interview Mitch Altman. [00:00:30] Mitch is an inventor and self-described hacker. He cofounded the company three where and is now the president and CTO of cornfield electronics. We're talking to him about Noisebridge, the San Francisco hackerspace that he co founded, as well as some of his many inventions. These include the TVB gone a remote that turns off most TVs and his recently successful Kickstarter project, the neuro dreamer sleep mask. Mitch Altman. Welcome to spectrum. [00:01:00] Thanks. Would you mind telling us sort of that career path? Speaker 4: How I got to sitting here today? Uh, I've been a geek all my life. You know, I dreamed about this stuff when I was a little kid. I actually did a, I remember having this recurring dream where I saw the inside of my mom's radio, which, uh, they were tubes. I didn't know what tooks were though. They were just glowing. They look cool. And I dreamed about pushing it off the counter to see what was in it. And in my dreams I actually did it. But in real life [00:01:30] I was always too timid. But I really wanted to see what was inside. And eventually I started taking apart my parents things and somehow they let me and eventually I learned to put them back together, making my own things from scratch. It's been fun in electronics, I always want to know how things work. I mean that's, that's what makes us geeks tick, you know. Speaker 4: But the thing that fascinated me the most was electronics. So I started playing with wires and alligator clips and putting forks into electrical outlets and having my parents scrape me off the ceiling [00:02:00] and learning from my mistakes, learning and growing. And eventually I was making my own intercoms between my brother's bunk bed and mine below him in high school, making an electronic bong. And, uh, that was one of the things that actually got me talking to other kids rather than just being alone geek. So, uh, inventing, making things. It's been part of my life since I can remember thinking. But you've also had this entrepreneurial spirit as well, I suppose. Yeah. And I'm not really sure [00:02:30] where that came from. Maybe from my parents. My father was an architect, you know, and I see a lot of what I do as art, you know, expressing ourselves truthfully and doing things in a way that give other people an opportunity to think about themselves in the world around them. Speaker 4: And my father did his art architecture and it made him a living without really being conscious of it. That's probably the path that I followed. I actually quit the job that I had created for myself, which was consulting in electronics [00:03:00] for usually small companies. But I quit that so I could explore ways of doing more of what I loved and that's how I came across TV be gone. And I was lucky enough that it actually makes me a living. It's really cool to be able to make a living by doing what you love, making enough money, doing what you love to keep doing what you love. I mean, that's my idea of success. Where does the inspiration come from your projects? Well, that's a good question. Where does inspiration come from? You know, obviously, uh, other people can be inspiring random [00:03:30] events in our lives and people are a great random elements in our lives. Speaker 4: And if we relate to people when they throw something at us that really sticks in our [inaudible] and uh, nibbles away at us, uh, it's like sticking in there. Maybe it's subconscious. Eventually it becomes an idea for a project that screaming to come out, TV gone. I got the idea of sitting in a Chinese restaurant in 1993 talking with some friends and we were there [00:04:00] to talk to each other, not to watch TV. And yet there was a TV on and we were watching the TV and that was crazy. So we started talking about that and then I thought, wouldn't it be wonderful if I could just turn off these horrible distractions everywhere I went? And instantly I knew I could because I'm a geek. Of course. It took me 10 years to get to a point in my life where I had time and energy to do it. Speaker 4: And I'm glad I did. And I had to make that time though. You know, inspiration is really important. Ideas are really important, but they don't go anywhere unless [00:04:30] you make the time to do something with them. And you just prioritize it because you're passionate about it. Or how, how do you make sure that you actually finish something? You start o finishing what you start. Well, you know, I think that's overrated. I've done zillions of projects as have we all that we have that I haven't finished. That's great. You know, and if I'm not motivated to finish it, that leaves time for doing something else. TV began I think is the first project in my entire life where I actually finished it. Totally. And I had to, if I was going to make [00:05:00] it a product, you know, and uh, I don't think we've mentioned TV beyond for people that don't know, it is a key chain that turns TVs off in public places and it really does work. Speaker 4: And I did it cause I got rid of TV in my life at home. I am a TV addict. Uh, I watched it every waking moment of my life as an unhappy child, but I didn't have to keep doing it later in life. And I chose not to, but in public, no one chooses those things to be on. People don't leave their home to watch television except me for sports [00:05:30] bars or something. But I don't like bars and I don't like sports so I don't go to those but everywhere else. So I made it so I could turn them off and other people wanted them. And then when their friends wanted them in friends of friends, that's when I decided I would make a bunch. So, um, I started it like many projects and it got on a roll unlike many projects. But I actually was so passionate about it continually and I had so many people that are kept asking me when's that going to be done? That that probably helped me follow through and actually finish it [00:06:00] and get it to a point where it's a manufacturable product. Speaker 2: [inaudible] you are listening to spectrum Inka LX Berkeley. Our guest is inventor Mitch Altman. Speaker 4: And once you get something at that point, what's next? Do you tinker and invent more stuff or do you spend time supporting TVB gone or, yeah. Well when you do what you love, all sorts of [00:06:30] interesting things open up that you might notice where you wouldn't if you're consumed doing something that just exhausts you like a job, you know, you don't like that too. Many of us, unfortunately on our planet are in that position. I have been working on many other projects along the way. I started getting into hacker conferences and maker fairs as a result of TVB gone. People invited me to these things and I, um, would give talks, [00:07:00] which is kind of bizarre for me. A totally introverted geek, terrified of public speaking. Like so many other of us introverted geeks. But, uh, it turned out I liked it. It makes it easier to talk about something you love. Speaker 4: Yeah. I don't like being pedantic. Uh, I like making things fun and if other people relate then maybe they'll learn something, maybe make a new choice in their life that serves them better and I don't want to tell anyone else what to do. Well sometimes I do, but I like making it more fun for people to choose for themselves what's good for themselves. [00:07:30] I found a place where at hacker conferences, at maker fairs where I could teach doing what I really love, which is soldering and making cool things with electronics and that led to me finding things to teach with. So I started making my own little kits for total beginners and I started doing that by hacking other people's kids and then making my own and that's been supplementing my income a little bit, but mostly it's been paying for me to be able to travel around the world and teach doing this, which I also [00:08:00] love. Speaker 4: That led to going to more hacker conferences and maker fairs and things related and going to hacker spaces that existed but not too many back then. Back then was 2007 okay. The first maker fair was 2006 which led me to meet people who invited me to the first hacker conference also in 2006 that I went to a hope in New York every other year. And I've been actually helping organize those now, which is another thing I make time for at one [00:08:30] of these hacker conferences in Germany, put on by the chaos computer club who have been responsible for creating hackerspaces in Germany and then the world for over a quarter century now of in 2007 it was about a quarter century of that and they gave a presentation on how to start your own and I was way inspired to come home and do that in my home town and with my friend Jake, we Noisebridge and instantly we just put out the word and we got lots [00:09:00] of way cool people to help and with our ideas and their ideas collected more people. Speaker 4: And Noisebridge was a just a natural growth out of all of our enthusiasm and inspiration for having the energy and the high really of being at one of these hacker conferences where people do what they love, explore it, they love Sharon, teach and learn from each other. Uh, but not just once a year, uh, but every day, all night, all day, all year round. [00:09:30] And Wow. Hundreds of us go through there every week. And it constantly amazes me how many cool people are doing cool things there now. And what kinds of things happen at Noisebridge? It's very diverse. A, it's not just tech. You know, I teach soldering and electronics, but [inaudible] Mondays. Yeah. So every Monday, uh, since 2007, I've been teaching how to solder and I love doing that. I'm really good at it by now too. And when I'm not in town, I'm on the road. Other people do [00:10:00] it on Wednesdays. Speaker 4: There's a similar kind of thing for craft and art folks to get together and that's called scow sewing, crafting or whatever. Also on Mondays is people. There's someone who's teaching a class on how to do your own website. There's a python language class, there's German language, human language class, there's a space exploration program, there's food classes. We have a full kitchen, we have a dark room, there's lithography classes. He printing three d printers. We got lots of those. And we understood [00:10:30] sewing machines and lots of cool, uh, electronics equipment as well as the machine shop and laser cutter and a library. We've got classrooms, we've got events, spaces, all this and more. And everything happens just because people think it would be cool to do. And they, they do it and people help. And this is just one of about a thousand hackerspaces in the world. Now it's another thing I love doing is going around helping people start these supportive communities, which are hackerspaces for people to explore and do what they love and hopefully even make a living out of it [00:11:00] so they can do what they enjoy and find fulfillment in their lives. Speaker 4: You know, now there's only a thousand in the world. What will the world be like when there's a million? Uh, more opportunities for people to do. Way more cool things. Earlier guests on our show did talk about the makerspace project of which you're fairly vocal critics. So can you say why you're a critic? I wouldn't say I'm a critic. I love maker fair and I love make magazine. They've created opportunities for so many people and my life has been [00:11:30] changed for the positive by it and so it was so many other people and it will continue to be that kind of positive role model for others as well. They recently sought and received a grant for $10 million from DARPA, which is an arm of a research arm of the u s military. Their goal is to help create new technology for the u s military. That's their stated goal. So they have a bunch of grants now available. Speaker 4: Most of them are because they [00:12:00] see the u s education system as horribly flawed as do I. People in the u s military see that just as clearly as many of us too. And making grants for hands on learning is a way to give more people opportunity to at least have a start and becoming high quality engineers, which they need to further the goals of their organizations, which is in my view, simply put to hurt and kill people. Of course, that's [00:12:30] my personal view. You know, other people will see it differently. What I would love to see happen is for people to explore and continually reevaluate what it means to them to receive funding from organizations or people whose goals don't align with your own cause. There's consequences, so anything we do, there's consequences. There's pluses and minuses for everything. When you accept funds from sources that have goals that don't [00:13:00] align with your own, of course you're helping your goals because you have funding to do so, but you're also helping the goals of the funding source, which don't align with your own. Speaker 4: How do you actually weigh the pluses and minuses in that way? It's not easy, but for me, after struggling with it for months, I can't feel good about associating myself with helping the goals of DARPA. Even though good things come from what DARPA has [00:13:30] done, I would rather put my energy directly into doing things that I believe are helping people rather than helping the goals of an organization that does things that I find well, use the word reprehensible, so I'm not trying to talk anyone into not associating with makerfair or make magazine. I still respect many of the people at make and a maker fair, great deal. I think they'll do great things. I just can't feel [00:14:00] good about helping myself and I really would hope that people do consider the funding sources because it does change what you'll do maybe consciously, maybe subconsciously. So what are you willing to do that you might not have done to make it more likely to get funding renewed funding? Speaker 4: What are they going to stop doing that they might have done because it doesn't look so good to the funding source? I see these as very, very much related. It's really important [00:14:30] to explore these things before making a conscious choice about whether to accept these funding sources. Maybe it's worth it. Maybe it isn't. It's up to each and every individual. I need a couple points of clarification just to make sure we got everything right. Yeah. So the DARPA funding at all go to maker fair to your knowledge? Uh, sort of the, with some of the other projects that those same people were doing well before making my choice. I talk to the person who started maker fair and make magazine, [00:15:00] uh, Dale Dougherty and he's a great guy. We've done lots of cool things through the years together. And my main goal was to explore the possibility of helping with maker fair without being associated with DARPA funding. And the funding that they got is for a program they call mentor program a but that's intertwined with making makerfair. So there's no way to dissociate the funding Speaker 2: [inaudible] [00:15:30] this is spectrum k a l x Berkeley. Our guest is Mitch Altman, Co founder of the hackerspace Noisebridge. Speaker 4: I also see this theme of wanting to help people. So for instance, you host these depression and Geek meetups. Life isn't all totally wonderful. Life is full of things that are amazingly wonderful and rapturous and blissful and it's full of things [00:16:00] that totally suck and anything in between up, down and all around. And any given life, no matter how wonderful your life is, uh, there's ups and downs. And I, um, started off my life as a totally depressed geek and, um, I was brutally bullied. I was, you know, I'm introverted geeks when I was a little kid, did not farewell. And not only that, but, uh, I was an am queer and little kids take any difference big and small, and they brutalize [00:16:30] people for it. Uh, life was horrible for me and my parents were terrible parents. Lucky for me. They turned out to be cool people as adults for me when I was at adult. Speaker 4: And uh, no matter what childhood can be rough for people and there's unhealed stuff and we carry all of that with us if we survive into adulthood. And here we all are as adults living our lives, hopefully exploring and doing what we love with the help of, uh, our supportive communities, including hackerspaces, but still there was a huge [00:17:00] amount of depression in geek communities. Uh, last November a friend of mine killed himself. It was the first time in my life where I felt close to someone who killed themselves. And, uh, it's rough. It really, really sucks. There's nothing like it. And still, uh, by this time in my life I tried to see opportunity in anything to help not only myself but other people. It's part of my healing process. So I wrote up [00:17:30] a very personal blog post on the Noisebridge blog site about my feelings and hundreds or more people responded. Speaker 4: It was overwhelming. And, uh, it really showed me that way more people are dealing with depression than I could imagine. And, and my friend, I had no clue he was, and I'm very sensitive to it. He hit it so well and I hit it well when I was a first half of my life living with depression. But yeah, a lot of us in the geek world. And in our planet are suffering [00:18:00] with depression. So after all these responses, I thought, you know, maybe we could have a meetup where we can talk about this and openly and if we talk about this openly as a community, maybe maybe someone will reach out for help rather than harm themselves and maybe someone will live another night. And any case, these geek and depression meetups that I started are now happening in various cities around the world and hopefully more as, as we become [00:18:30] more open about this cause, you know, I think we really can benefit all of us, each of us and as a community, if everyone is able to be totally open about all of who we are and not have to be shameful or secretive about something, you know, we can be open about everything but this then, then soon we're closing off huge parts of our lives and we have this part we can't even explore ourselves cause we can't talk about it to anyone. Speaker 4: We're not open about it with ourselves and not just about being queer or [00:19:00] whatever, but also being depressed, feeling suicidal, has a lot of shame associated with it. And a lot of people feel, unfortunately, sadly, tragically, that the easiest way out is killing themselves rather than just asking for help. And that's just so awful and unnecessary. So, uh, there are geeking depression meetups now that happened in San Francisco. I would like to see more happen elsewhere, bigger, small, whatever, and I'm [00:19:30] always available if anyone wants to contact me for any reason, project help how to start a company. Uh, if you're depressed, if you want someone to talk you into quitting a job, you don't like anything. I'm totally willing to communicate any time. Just please email me mitch@cornfieldelectronics.com. Speaker 2: [inaudible]. Our Guest Today on spectrum is Mitch Altman, enter hackerspace activist. This is KALX Berkeley. Speaker 4: [00:20:00] You had, uh, mentioned this sort of lackluster state of science, technology, engineering and math education or education in general. Do you see other possible solutions to bringing that up? Yes. This is one of the huge reasons why I started Noisebridge and why help other hackerspaces start. These are places where education happens in a very real wonderful way. Noisebridge is a 500 C3 public [00:20:30] benefit corporation in the state of California, but it's not your traditional kind of education organization. We teach and learn and share through hands on whether it's with computers, whether it's in a kitchen, a sewing machine, a soldering iron, a machine shop, whether it's exploring biology and growing mushrooms or using a laser cutter or exploring space. It's all about learning and teaching and sharing. People can try stuff if they know they love something, they can blurt more, they can [00:21:00] teach it. Speaker 4: It's really fantastic and this is an opportunity for some people to actually learn what they want to learn to live lives that they want to live. I wish the u s education system were more of that way, but it's very unfortunate that the only schools, well most of the schools that actually provide that opportunity are very expensive. Private schools in our country and there are fortunately some exceptions. I was just teaching some kids over at them, met West School in [00:21:30] Oakland who are providing hands on learning for their kids and it's public. It's really cool that, that, that exists. But it's only, I think 165 kids are allowed there. I would love to see more of that. So hackerspaces around the world are providing these opportunities right now. It's very few opportunities compared to what we need. There's only a thousand hackerspaces in the world and we need a million and we'll get there. Speaker 4: Uh, because hackerspaces are incredibly cool. People are [00:22:00] spontaneously creating them. There's all sorts of ways we can create these niches within which we can provide ourselves the services that our governments are not providing us. Hackerspaces just happened to be a really wonderful way near and dear to my heart and Mitch, our hackerspaces able to reach out to younger students populations that are stuck in those schools that you were talking about that aren't doing any of this hands on stuff. Yeah, well they, it's already, uh, it's already there. I mean, Noisebridge has [00:22:30] always been welcoming to people of all ages and most hackerspaces are, although some are afraid of liability issues a and they only have 18 and over, which I think is absurd. Yeah, there's, there's no age limit for learning. Not If we don't have it beaten out of us. That is, I'm not doing hackerspaces to get rid of schools. Speaker 4: I would love schools to become places where people can actually learn, but kids can have these often totally free and it Noisebridge [00:23:00] it's always free opportunities as an alternative during lunch or before or after school, they can come to Noisebridge over weekends, uh, with or without their parents. People are always welcome to come. Hopefully as there were more and more hackerspaces, there'll be more opportunities for these kids. There are hackerspaces in the East Bay, there's ace monster toys. There's one that's just forming now called pseudo room, s u d o room, [00:23:30] and there's mothership hacker moms, which is primarily for moms who are hackers and there's also a lowel space. I can't remember what the acronym stands for, unfortunately, but therefore liberating ourselves locally. There you go. Liberating ourselves locally. There are a bunch of cool people primarily for, uh, hackers of color, of various sorts and we need more. There's actually people just now starting to talk about another hackerspace in [00:24:00] San Francisco. What I would love to see is a hackerspace in every neighborhood of San Francisco, every neighborhood of every city around the country. We need a million of these things. Okay. Well, Mitch, thanks for joining us. Yeah, it's been great being here. Thanks for having me. Awesome. Speaker 5: Mm. Speaker 6: A regular feature of spectrum is to mention a few of the science and technology events happening locally over the next two weeks. Rick Kaneski at Lisa kind of joined me for the calendar. The next science [00:24:30] at cal lecture will be given at 11:00 AM on August the 18th in genetics and plants biology room 100 the lecture will be given by Dr Anton Trypsin and will be titled, can one see a flower through a granite wall? Amazing capabilities of neutron imaging. The detection technology developed for NASA astrophysical missions at UC Berkeley space science lab has been successfully extended to such diverse areas as synchrotron instrumentation, biomedical imaging, ground-based astronomy [00:25:00] and neutron micro tomography. Dr Trypsin will talk about his experience with neutron imaging and how it's useful find new applications. He got his phd in Applied Physics in 1992 at the Russian Academy of Sciences and was then a British royal society fellow with University of Lye Chester and joined the space scientist lab at UC Berkeley in 1996 where he is currently a research associate Speaker 7: on Saturday, August 18th the exploratorium at three six zero one line street at the Palace of fine arts in San Francisco [00:25:30] and celebrating founder of Frank Oppenheimer's hundredth birthday. Standard admission is $25 but college students, seniors, teachers, persons with disabilities and youths age six to 17 pay only $19 members and children five and under are free during regular museum hours of 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM visitors can take part in a variety of events and activities. Honoring Frank at the explorer bowls table from 11:00 AM to 2:00 PM you can make a spinning top when [00:26:00] a Frank's favorite DIY projects throughout the day in the mine theater. You can see a series of exploratorium home movies featuring the early days of the museum as well as footage of frank engaging with visitors and staff. Today's events will also feature a frank themed presentation in the McBean theater and screenings of some of his favorite films from the museums, cinema arts archives, including the Em's classic powers of 10 there will also be birthday cake exploratory members can go [00:26:30] to a special celebration from six [inaudible] 9:00 PM for more information, visit exploratorium.edu no news with [inaudible] Speaker 6: Karnofsky and Lisa Katovich. The Berkeley Earth surface temperature reports that the average temperature of the earth land has risen by 2.5 Fahrenheit over the past 250 years, including an increase of 1.5 degrees over the most recent 50 years. The good match between the new temperature record and historical carbon dioxide records suggest [00:27:00] that the most straightforward explanation for this warming is human greenhouse gas emissions. Five Times more station records were used than in previous analyses and a new statistical approach allowed Berkeley Earth to go about a hundred years farther back in time than previous studies allowing the team to conclude that the contribution of solar activity to global warming is negligible. Five scientific papers including the raw data are available online@berkeleyearth.org Elizabeth Mueller Co founder and executive director [00:27:30] of Berkeley Earth says that one of our goals at Berkeley Earth is complete transparency. We believe that everyone should be able to access raw climate data and do their own analysis. Mueller was a guest on spectrum and her interview is available on iTunes university Speaker 7: science daily reports that UCLA researchers found that older adults who regularly used a brain fitness program played on the computer demonstrated significantly improved memory and language skills. The team studied 59 participants with an [00:28:00] average age of 84 recruited from local retirement communities in southern California. The volunteers were split into two groups. The first group you used the brain fitness program for an average of 73 and a half, 20 minute sessions across a six month period. Well a second group. You use it less than 45 times. During that same period, researchers found that the first group demonstrated significantly higher improvement in memory and language skills compared to the second group. The study's findings add to the field exploring whether such brain fitness tools may help improve language [00:28:30] in memory and may ultimately help protect individuals from the cognitive decline associated with aging and Alzheimer's disease. Age-Related memory decline affects approximately 40% of older adults and is characterized by self perception of memory loss and decline in memory performance. Previous studies have shown that engaging in mental activities can help improve memory. That little research has been done to determine whether the numerous brain fitness games or memory training programs on the market are effective. This is one of the first studies to assess the cognitive effects [00:29:00] of the computerized memory training program. Speaker 1: [inaudible]Speaker 2: [inaudible]Speaker 1: [inaudible].Speaker 2: The music heard during the show is by Anna David from his album folk acoustic made available by a creative Commons license 3.0 attribution. [00:29:30] Thank you for listening to spectrum. If you have comments about the show, please send them to us via email. Our email address is spectrum.at Speaker 1: yahoo.com join us in two weeks at the same time. [inaudible]. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Spectrum
Mitch Altman

Spectrum

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2012 30:00


Inventor and self-described hacker Mitch Altman talks about Noisebridge, the San Francisco hackerspace he co-founded. Altman is responsible for co-founding 3-ware is now the President and CTO of Cornfield Electronics. His many inventions include TV-B-Gone and NeuroDreamer sleep mask.TranscriptSpeaker 1: Spectrum's next Speaker 2: [inaudible]. Welcome to spectrum the science and technology show on k l x Berkeley, a biweekly Speaker 1: 30 minute program bringing you interviews, featuring bay area scientists and technologists as well as a calendar of local events and news. Speaker 3: Good afternoon. My name is Brad Swift on today's show. Rick Carnesi and I interview Mitch Altman. [00:00:30] Mitch is an inventor and self-described hacker. He cofounded the company three where and is now the president and CTO of cornfield electronics. We're talking to him about Noisebridge, the San Francisco hackerspace that he co founded, as well as some of his many inventions. These include the TVB gone a remote that turns off most TVs and his recently successful Kickstarter project, the neuro dreamer sleep mask. Mitch Altman. Welcome to spectrum. [00:01:00] Thanks. Would you mind telling us sort of that career path? Speaker 4: How I got to sitting here today? Uh, I've been a geek all my life. You know, I dreamed about this stuff when I was a little kid. I actually did a, I remember having this recurring dream where I saw the inside of my mom's radio, which, uh, they were tubes. I didn't know what tooks were though. They were just glowing. They look cool. And I dreamed about pushing it off the counter to see what was in it. And in my dreams I actually did it. But in real life [00:01:30] I was always too timid. But I really wanted to see what was inside. And eventually I started taking apart my parents things and somehow they let me and eventually I learned to put them back together, making my own things from scratch. It's been fun in electronics, I always want to know how things work. I mean that's, that's what makes us geeks tick, you know. Speaker 4: But the thing that fascinated me the most was electronics. So I started playing with wires and alligator clips and putting forks into electrical outlets and having my parents scrape me off the ceiling [00:02:00] and learning from my mistakes, learning and growing. And eventually I was making my own intercoms between my brother's bunk bed and mine below him in high school, making an electronic bong. And, uh, that was one of the things that actually got me talking to other kids rather than just being alone geek. So, uh, inventing, making things. It's been part of my life since I can remember thinking. But you've also had this entrepreneurial spirit as well, I suppose. Yeah. And I'm not really sure [00:02:30] where that came from. Maybe from my parents. My father was an architect, you know, and I see a lot of what I do as art, you know, expressing ourselves truthfully and doing things in a way that give other people an opportunity to think about themselves in the world around them. Speaker 4: And my father did his art architecture and it made him a living without really being conscious of it. That's probably the path that I followed. I actually quit the job that I had created for myself, which was consulting in electronics [00:03:00] for usually small companies. But I quit that so I could explore ways of doing more of what I loved and that's how I came across TV be gone. And I was lucky enough that it actually makes me a living. It's really cool to be able to make a living by doing what you love, making enough money, doing what you love to keep doing what you love. I mean, that's my idea of success. Where does the inspiration come from your projects? Well, that's a good question. Where does inspiration come from? You know, obviously, uh, other people can be inspiring random [00:03:30] events in our lives and people are a great random elements in our lives. Speaker 4: And if we relate to people when they throw something at us that really sticks in our [inaudible] and uh, nibbles away at us, uh, it's like sticking in there. Maybe it's subconscious. Eventually it becomes an idea for a project that screaming to come out, TV gone. I got the idea of sitting in a Chinese restaurant in 1993 talking with some friends and we were there [00:04:00] to talk to each other, not to watch TV. And yet there was a TV on and we were watching the TV and that was crazy. So we started talking about that and then I thought, wouldn't it be wonderful if I could just turn off these horrible distractions everywhere I went? And instantly I knew I could because I'm a geek. Of course. It took me 10 years to get to a point in my life where I had time and energy to do it. Speaker 4: And I'm glad I did. And I had to make that time though. You know, inspiration is really important. Ideas are really important, but they don't go anywhere unless [00:04:30] you make the time to do something with them. And you just prioritize it because you're passionate about it. Or how, how do you make sure that you actually finish something? You start o finishing what you start. Well, you know, I think that's overrated. I've done zillions of projects as have we all that we have that I haven't finished. That's great. You know, and if I'm not motivated to finish it, that leaves time for doing something else. TV began I think is the first project in my entire life where I actually finished it. Totally. And I had to, if I was going to make [00:05:00] it a product, you know, and uh, I don't think we've mentioned TV beyond for people that don't know, it is a key chain that turns TVs off in public places and it really does work. Speaker 4: And I did it cause I got rid of TV in my life at home. I am a TV addict. Uh, I watched it every waking moment of my life as an unhappy child, but I didn't have to keep doing it later in life. And I chose not to, but in public, no one chooses those things to be on. People don't leave their home to watch television except me for sports [00:05:30] bars or something. But I don't like bars and I don't like sports so I don't go to those but everywhere else. So I made it so I could turn them off and other people wanted them. And then when their friends wanted them in friends of friends, that's when I decided I would make a bunch. So, um, I started it like many projects and it got on a roll unlike many projects. But I actually was so passionate about it continually and I had so many people that are kept asking me when's that going to be done? That that probably helped me follow through and actually finish it [00:06:00] and get it to a point where it's a manufacturable product. Speaker 2: [inaudible] you are listening to spectrum Inka LX Berkeley. Our guest is inventor Mitch Altman. Speaker 4: And once you get something at that point, what's next? Do you tinker and invent more stuff or do you spend time supporting TVB gone or, yeah. Well when you do what you love, all sorts of [00:06:30] interesting things open up that you might notice where you wouldn't if you're consumed doing something that just exhausts you like a job, you know, you don't like that too. Many of us, unfortunately on our planet are in that position. I have been working on many other projects along the way. I started getting into hacker conferences and maker fairs as a result of TVB gone. People invited me to these things and I, um, would give talks, [00:07:00] which is kind of bizarre for me. A totally introverted geek, terrified of public speaking. Like so many other of us introverted geeks. But, uh, it turned out I liked it. It makes it easier to talk about something you love. Speaker 4: Yeah. I don't like being pedantic. Uh, I like making things fun and if other people relate then maybe they'll learn something, maybe make a new choice in their life that serves them better and I don't want to tell anyone else what to do. Well sometimes I do, but I like making it more fun for people to choose for themselves what's good for themselves. [00:07:30] I found a place where at hacker conferences, at maker fairs where I could teach doing what I really love, which is soldering and making cool things with electronics and that led to me finding things to teach with. So I started making my own little kits for total beginners and I started doing that by hacking other people's kids and then making my own and that's been supplementing my income a little bit, but mostly it's been paying for me to be able to travel around the world and teach doing this, which I also [00:08:00] love. Speaker 4: That led to going to more hacker conferences and maker fairs and things related and going to hacker spaces that existed but not too many back then. Back then was 2007 okay. The first maker fair was 2006 which led me to meet people who invited me to the first hacker conference also in 2006 that I went to a hope in New York every other year. And I've been actually helping organize those now, which is another thing I make time for at one [00:08:30] of these hacker conferences in Germany, put on by the chaos computer club who have been responsible for creating hackerspaces in Germany and then the world for over a quarter century now of in 2007 it was about a quarter century of that and they gave a presentation on how to start your own and I was way inspired to come home and do that in my home town and with my friend Jake, we Noisebridge and instantly we just put out the word and we got lots [00:09:00] of way cool people to help and with our ideas and their ideas collected more people. Speaker 4: And Noisebridge was a just a natural growth out of all of our enthusiasm and inspiration for having the energy and the high really of being at one of these hacker conferences where people do what they love, explore it, they love Sharon, teach and learn from each other. Uh, but not just once a year, uh, but every day, all night, all day, all year round. [00:09:30] And Wow. Hundreds of us go through there every week. And it constantly amazes me how many cool people are doing cool things there now. And what kinds of things happen at Noisebridge? It's very diverse. A, it's not just tech. You know, I teach soldering and electronics, but [inaudible] Mondays. Yeah. So every Monday, uh, since 2007, I've been teaching how to solder and I love doing that. I'm really good at it by now too. And when I'm not in town, I'm on the road. Other people do [00:10:00] it on Wednesdays. Speaker 4: There's a similar kind of thing for craft and art folks to get together and that's called scow sewing, crafting or whatever. Also on Mondays is people. There's someone who's teaching a class on how to do your own website. There's a python language class, there's German language, human language class, there's a space exploration program, there's food classes. We have a full kitchen, we have a dark room, there's lithography classes. He printing three d printers. We got lots of those. And we understood [00:10:30] sewing machines and lots of cool, uh, electronics equipment as well as the machine shop and laser cutter and a library. We've got classrooms, we've got events, spaces, all this and more. And everything happens just because people think it would be cool to do. And they, they do it and people help. And this is just one of about a thousand hackerspaces in the world. Now it's another thing I love doing is going around helping people start these supportive communities, which are hackerspaces for people to explore and do what they love and hopefully even make a living out of it [00:11:00] so they can do what they enjoy and find fulfillment in their lives. Speaker 4: You know, now there's only a thousand in the world. What will the world be like when there's a million? Uh, more opportunities for people to do. Way more cool things. Earlier guests on our show did talk about the makerspace project of which you're fairly vocal critics. So can you say why you're a critic? I wouldn't say I'm a critic. I love maker fair and I love make magazine. They've created opportunities for so many people and my life has been [00:11:30] changed for the positive by it and so it was so many other people and it will continue to be that kind of positive role model for others as well. They recently sought and received a grant for $10 million from DARPA, which is an arm of a research arm of the u s military. Their goal is to help create new technology for the u s military. That's their stated goal. So they have a bunch of grants now available. Speaker 4: Most of them are because they [00:12:00] see the u s education system as horribly flawed as do I. People in the u s military see that just as clearly as many of us too. And making grants for hands on learning is a way to give more people opportunity to at least have a start and becoming high quality engineers, which they need to further the goals of their organizations, which is in my view, simply put to hurt and kill people. Of course, that's [00:12:30] my personal view. You know, other people will see it differently. What I would love to see happen is for people to explore and continually reevaluate what it means to them to receive funding from organizations or people whose goals don't align with your own cause. There's consequences, so anything we do, there's consequences. There's pluses and minuses for everything. When you accept funds from sources that have goals that don't [00:13:00] align with your own, of course you're helping your goals because you have funding to do so, but you're also helping the goals of the funding source, which don't align with your own. Speaker 4: How do you actually weigh the pluses and minuses in that way? It's not easy, but for me, after struggling with it for months, I can't feel good about associating myself with helping the goals of DARPA. Even though good things come from what DARPA has [00:13:30] done, I would rather put my energy directly into doing things that I believe are helping people rather than helping the goals of an organization that does things that I find well, use the word reprehensible, so I'm not trying to talk anyone into not associating with makerfair or make magazine. I still respect many of the people at make and a maker fair, great deal. I think they'll do great things. I just can't feel [00:14:00] good about helping myself and I really would hope that people do consider the funding sources because it does change what you'll do maybe consciously, maybe subconsciously. So what are you willing to do that you might not have done to make it more likely to get funding renewed funding? Speaker 4: What are they going to stop doing that they might have done because it doesn't look so good to the funding source? I see these as very, very much related. It's really important [00:14:30] to explore these things before making a conscious choice about whether to accept these funding sources. Maybe it's worth it. Maybe it isn't. It's up to each and every individual. I need a couple points of clarification just to make sure we got everything right. Yeah. So the DARPA funding at all go to maker fair to your knowledge? Uh, sort of the, with some of the other projects that those same people were doing well before making my choice. I talk to the person who started maker fair and make magazine, [00:15:00] uh, Dale Dougherty and he's a great guy. We've done lots of cool things through the years together. And my main goal was to explore the possibility of helping with maker fair without being associated with DARPA funding. And the funding that they got is for a program they call mentor program a but that's intertwined with making makerfair. So there's no way to dissociate the funding Speaker 2: [inaudible] [00:15:30] this is spectrum k a l x Berkeley. Our guest is Mitch Altman, Co founder of the hackerspace Noisebridge. Speaker 4: I also see this theme of wanting to help people. So for instance, you host these depression and Geek meetups. Life isn't all totally wonderful. Life is full of things that are amazingly wonderful and rapturous and blissful and it's full of things [00:16:00] that totally suck and anything in between up, down and all around. And any given life, no matter how wonderful your life is, uh, there's ups and downs. And I, um, started off my life as a totally depressed geek and, um, I was brutally bullied. I was, you know, I'm introverted geeks when I was a little kid, did not farewell. And not only that, but, uh, I was an am queer and little kids take any difference big and small, and they brutalize [00:16:30] people for it. Uh, life was horrible for me and my parents were terrible parents. Lucky for me. They turned out to be cool people as adults for me when I was at adult. Speaker 4: And uh, no matter what childhood can be rough for people and there's unhealed stuff and we carry all of that with us if we survive into adulthood. And here we all are as adults living our lives, hopefully exploring and doing what we love with the help of, uh, our supportive communities, including hackerspaces, but still there was a huge [00:17:00] amount of depression in geek communities. Uh, last November a friend of mine killed himself. It was the first time in my life where I felt close to someone who killed themselves. And, uh, it's rough. It really, really sucks. There's nothing like it. And still, uh, by this time in my life I tried to see opportunity in anything to help not only myself but other people. It's part of my healing process. So I wrote up [00:17:30] a very personal blog post on the Noisebridge blog site about my feelings and hundreds or more people responded. Speaker 4: It was overwhelming. And, uh, it really showed me that way more people are dealing with depression than I could imagine. And, and my friend, I had no clue he was, and I'm very sensitive to it. He hit it so well and I hit it well when I was a first half of my life living with depression. But yeah, a lot of us in the geek world. And in our planet are suffering [00:18:00] with depression. So after all these responses, I thought, you know, maybe we could have a meetup where we can talk about this and openly and if we talk about this openly as a community, maybe maybe someone will reach out for help rather than harm themselves and maybe someone will live another night. And any case, these geek and depression meetups that I started are now happening in various cities around the world and hopefully more as, as we become [00:18:30] more open about this cause, you know, I think we really can benefit all of us, each of us and as a community, if everyone is able to be totally open about all of who we are and not have to be shameful or secretive about something, you know, we can be open about everything but this then, then soon we're closing off huge parts of our lives and we have this part we can't even explore ourselves cause we can't talk about it to anyone. Speaker 4: We're not open about it with ourselves and not just about being queer or [00:19:00] whatever, but also being depressed, feeling suicidal, has a lot of shame associated with it. And a lot of people feel, unfortunately, sadly, tragically, that the easiest way out is killing themselves rather than just asking for help. And that's just so awful and unnecessary. So, uh, there are geeking depression meetups now that happened in San Francisco. I would like to see more happen elsewhere, bigger, small, whatever, and I'm [00:19:30] always available if anyone wants to contact me for any reason, project help how to start a company. Uh, if you're depressed, if you want someone to talk you into quitting a job, you don't like anything. I'm totally willing to communicate any time. Just please email me mitch@cornfieldelectronics.com. Speaker 2: [inaudible]. Our Guest Today on spectrum is Mitch Altman, enter hackerspace activist. This is KALX Berkeley. Speaker 4: [00:20:00] You had, uh, mentioned this sort of lackluster state of science, technology, engineering and math education or education in general. Do you see other possible solutions to bringing that up? Yes. This is one of the huge reasons why I started Noisebridge and why help other hackerspaces start. These are places where education happens in a very real wonderful way. Noisebridge is a 500 C3 public [00:20:30] benefit corporation in the state of California, but it's not your traditional kind of education organization. We teach and learn and share through hands on whether it's with computers, whether it's in a kitchen, a sewing machine, a soldering iron, a machine shop, whether it's exploring biology and growing mushrooms or using a laser cutter or exploring space. It's all about learning and teaching and sharing. People can try stuff if they know they love something, they can blurt more, they can [00:21:00] teach it. Speaker 4: It's really fantastic and this is an opportunity for some people to actually learn what they want to learn to live lives that they want to live. I wish the u s education system were more of that way, but it's very unfortunate that the only schools, well most of the schools that actually provide that opportunity are very expensive. Private schools in our country and there are fortunately some exceptions. I was just teaching some kids over at them, met West School in [00:21:30] Oakland who are providing hands on learning for their kids and it's public. It's really cool that, that, that exists. But it's only, I think 165 kids are allowed there. I would love to see more of that. So hackerspaces around the world are providing these opportunities right now. It's very few opportunities compared to what we need. There's only a thousand hackerspaces in the world and we need a million and we'll get there. Speaker 4: Uh, because hackerspaces are incredibly cool. People are [00:22:00] spontaneously creating them. There's all sorts of ways we can create these niches within which we can provide ourselves the services that our governments are not providing us. Hackerspaces just happened to be a really wonderful way near and dear to my heart and Mitch, our hackerspaces able to reach out to younger students populations that are stuck in those schools that you were talking about that aren't doing any of this hands on stuff. Yeah, well they, it's already, uh, it's already there. I mean, Noisebridge has [00:22:30] always been welcoming to people of all ages and most hackerspaces are, although some are afraid of liability issues a and they only have 18 and over, which I think is absurd. Yeah, there's, there's no age limit for learning. Not If we don't have it beaten out of us. That is, I'm not doing hackerspaces to get rid of schools. Speaker 4: I would love schools to become places where people can actually learn, but kids can have these often totally free and it Noisebridge [00:23:00] it's always free opportunities as an alternative during lunch or before or after school, they can come to Noisebridge over weekends, uh, with or without their parents. People are always welcome to come. Hopefully as there were more and more hackerspaces, there'll be more opportunities for these kids. There are hackerspaces in the East Bay, there's ace monster toys. There's one that's just forming now called pseudo room, s u d o room, [00:23:30] and there's mothership hacker moms, which is primarily for moms who are hackers and there's also a lowel space. I can't remember what the acronym stands for, unfortunately, but therefore liberating ourselves locally. There you go. Liberating ourselves locally. There are a bunch of cool people primarily for, uh, hackers of color, of various sorts and we need more. There's actually people just now starting to talk about another hackerspace in [00:24:00] San Francisco. What I would love to see is a hackerspace in every neighborhood of San Francisco, every neighborhood of every city around the country. We need a million of these things. Okay. Well, Mitch, thanks for joining us. Yeah, it's been great being here. Thanks for having me. Awesome. Speaker 5: Mm. Speaker 6: A regular feature of spectrum is to mention a few of the science and technology events happening locally over the next two weeks. Rick Kaneski at Lisa kind of joined me for the calendar. The next science [00:24:30] at cal lecture will be given at 11:00 AM on August the 18th in genetics and plants biology room 100 the lecture will be given by Dr Anton Trypsin and will be titled, can one see a flower through a granite wall? Amazing capabilities of neutron imaging. The detection technology developed for NASA astrophysical missions at UC Berkeley space science lab has been successfully extended to such diverse areas as synchrotron instrumentation, biomedical imaging, ground-based astronomy [00:25:00] and neutron micro tomography. Dr Trypsin will talk about his experience with neutron imaging and how it's useful find new applications. He got his phd in Applied Physics in 1992 at the Russian Academy of Sciences and was then a British royal society fellow with University of Lye Chester and joined the space scientist lab at UC Berkeley in 1996 where he is currently a research associate Speaker 7: on Saturday, August 18th the exploratorium at three six zero one line street at the Palace of fine arts in San Francisco [00:25:30] and celebrating founder of Frank Oppenheimer's hundredth birthday. Standard admission is $25 but college students, seniors, teachers, persons with disabilities and youths age six to 17 pay only $19 members and children five and under are free during regular museum hours of 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM visitors can take part in a variety of events and activities. Honoring Frank at the explorer bowls table from 11:00 AM to 2:00 PM you can make a spinning top when [00:26:00] a Frank's favorite DIY projects throughout the day in the mine theater. You can see a series of exploratorium home movies featuring the early days of the museum as well as footage of frank engaging with visitors and staff. Today's events will also feature a frank themed presentation in the McBean theater and screenings of some of his favorite films from the museums, cinema arts archives, including the Em's classic powers of 10 there will also be birthday cake exploratory members can go [00:26:30] to a special celebration from six [inaudible] 9:00 PM for more information, visit exploratorium.edu no news with [inaudible] Speaker 6: Karnofsky and Lisa Katovich. The Berkeley Earth surface temperature reports that the average temperature of the earth land has risen by 2.5 Fahrenheit over the past 250 years, including an increase of 1.5 degrees over the most recent 50 years. The good match between the new temperature record and historical carbon dioxide records suggest [00:27:00] that the most straightforward explanation for this warming is human greenhouse gas emissions. Five Times more station records were used than in previous analyses and a new statistical approach allowed Berkeley Earth to go about a hundred years farther back in time than previous studies allowing the team to conclude that the contribution of solar activity to global warming is negligible. Five scientific papers including the raw data are available online@berkeleyearth.org Elizabeth Mueller Co founder and executive director [00:27:30] of Berkeley Earth says that one of our goals at Berkeley Earth is complete transparency. We believe that everyone should be able to access raw climate data and do their own analysis. Mueller was a guest on spectrum and her interview is available on iTunes university Speaker 7: science daily reports that UCLA researchers found that older adults who regularly used a brain fitness program played on the computer demonstrated significantly improved memory and language skills. The team studied 59 participants with an [00:28:00] average age of 84 recruited from local retirement communities in southern California. The volunteers were split into two groups. The first group you used the brain fitness program for an average of 73 and a half, 20 minute sessions across a six month period. Well a second group. You use it less than 45 times. During that same period, researchers found that the first group demonstrated significantly higher improvement in memory and language skills compared to the second group. The study's findings add to the field exploring whether such brain fitness tools may help improve language [00:28:30] in memory and may ultimately help protect individuals from the cognitive decline associated with aging and Alzheimer's disease. Age-Related memory decline affects approximately 40% of older adults and is characterized by self perception of memory loss and decline in memory performance. Previous studies have shown that engaging in mental activities can help improve memory. That little research has been done to determine whether the numerous brain fitness games or memory training programs on the market are effective. This is one of the first studies to assess the cognitive effects [00:29:00] of the computerized memory training program. Speaker 1: [inaudible]Speaker 2: [inaudible]Speaker 1: [inaudible].Speaker 2: The music heard during the show is by Anna David from his album folk acoustic made available by a creative Commons license 3.0 attribution. [00:29:30] Thank you for listening to spectrum. If you have comments about the show, please send them to us via email. Our email address is spectrum.at Speaker 1: yahoo.com join us in two weeks at the same time. [inaudible]. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Science on the SPOT HD Video Podcast
Open Source Creativity - Hackerspaces: Science on the SPOT

Science on the SPOT HD Video Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2011 5:07


Inspired in part by the open source movement, public spaces are emerging where people congregate to share ideas, make cool projects, teach, and brainstorm with collaborators on everything from coding to cooking. With no leaders, they have one rule: "Be excellent to each other." Take a tour of the hackerspace Noisebridge, located in the heart of San Francisco's Mission District, with co-founder Mitch Altman.

KQED Science Video Podcast
Science on the SPOT: Open Source Creativity - Hackerspaces

KQED Science Video Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2011 5:07


Inspired in part by the open source movement, public spaces are emerging where people congregate to share ideas, make cool projects, teach, and brainstorm with collaborators on everything from coding to cooking. With no leaders, they have one rule: "Be excellent to each other." Take a tour of the hackerspace Noisebridge, located in the heart of San Francisco's Mission District, with co-founder Mitch Altman.

/dev/radio
DR145: Hackerspaces

/dev/radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2009 106:53


Was sind Hackerspaces? Wie baut man einen auf und was ist dabei zu beachten? Wie laeuft das in Ulm?

ulm hackerspaces
CRE: Technik, Kultur, Gesellschaft
CRE134 Hackerspaces

CRE: Technik, Kultur, Gesellschaft

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2009 107:13


Hackerspaces sind Orte, an denen kreative Leute zusammenkommen. In den letzten Jahre schießen sie wie Pilze aus dem Boden und es scheint, als ob hier sich hier um eine Idee handelt, deren Zeit gekommen ist. Aber was macht einen Hackerspace aus und wie hält man ihn am Leben? Im Gespräch mit Tim Pritlove stellen Astera und Johannes Grenzfurthner die Fortschritte der internationalen Bewegung der letzten zwei Jahre vor und erzählen, welche Aufgabe das Projekt hackerspaces.org dabei gespielt hat.

SecuraBit
SecuraByte Episode 3

SecuraBit

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2008 46:52


Last night we did a spontaneous hour long interview with the guys from HacDC, a Hackerspaces group.Hosts:Rob Fuller - Mubix Chris Mills - ChrisAM Chris Gerling - Hak5Chris Guests:Nick Farr - Treasurer HacDC Mitch Altman - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitch_Altman - NoiseBridge San FranciscoBryceHacDC  and Hackerspaces.What is a Hackerspace?: Physical space where hackers make things, inperson place to do things rather in addition to online.  People canwork on their own projects and collaborate with others.Mitch has been working on Brain machines.Tips on how to start a hackerspace:- Visit a hackerspace- Document on Hackerspace design patterns (PDF).- Go to Visit: Hackerspaces.org and email questions about getting started to info@hacdc.org- Last Hope Talk: Building Hacker Spaces Everywhere: Your Excuses are Invalid - Nick Farr and Friends (MP3).If I am not a member, can I go: Yes!Some hackerspaces mentioned:NY ResistorC-base (Berlin Germany)The Hacktory (Philadelphia)Mitch working on SF Space, NoiseBridgeNoiseBridge email listIntersting Hackerspace projects:Blinkenlights -Project Blinkenlights was a light installation in the Haus des Lehrersbuilding at the Alexanderplatz in Berlin that transformed the buildingfront into a giant low-resolution monochrome computer screen.tmplab - Paris Francehttp://www.tmplab.org/ (French)Columbia heights Wireless -The Columbia Heights Wireless Project aims to provide wireless access tothe Internet to HacDC's neighbors in Columbia Heights. This project, inthree phases, will help test different technologies and methods forproviding this access as well as building local neighborhood ITinfrastructure.