todo:
nyanscooter: electric scooter with nyan graffiti attachment. Either water rainbow trails, or chalk rainbow trails, or LED trails at night.
nyan “that was easy” button
todo:
nyanscooter: electric scooter with nyan graffiti attachment. Either water rainbow trails, or chalk rainbow trails, or LED trails at night.
nyan “that was easy” button
Mmmmm…. classes.
Started out with:
2.008 (Make a yoyo)
6.131 (Power electronics)
6.042 (Math for CS majors)
6.003 (Signals and Systems)
6.004 (Computation Structures)
Some HASS class
Now:
2.008 (Make a LED persistence of vision yoyo)
6.131 (Power electronics)
MAS.863 (How to make almost anything)
21M.611 (Foundations of Theater)
Possibly either 6.003 or 6.004, still.
In other words, I was ecstatic when I heard I got into MAS.863 and that flipped me in favor of not double-majoring in 2 and 6 (unless I decide to take an extra semester or something).
==mas.863==
Our first assignment:
Trying to think of interesting new ideas, I thought of pressfitting food (sparked by my interest in etching poptarts for nyancat poptart). The hunt for a suitable material is on…
Gingerbread recipe: http://homecooking.about.com/od/cookierecipes/r/blcookie111.htm
Other house-building person: http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2008/arch-sass-0703.html, http://cba.mit.edu/events/10.08.FAB6/Sass.pdf
Other materials guy: http://web.mit.edu/bin/cgicso?options=general&query=bredt came up with powder solution for 3d printing
(Other people’s projects, which overlapped with some of my other ideas:
===2.008===
In the meantime, I’ve also been ignoring the present day and contemplating the near future of 2.008. I think we’re supposed to be making paperweight designs or something, but my partner is a but hard to contact, so I’ve fallen back on daydreaming about LED persistence-of-vision yoyo’s. Doesn’t seem to have been done already, surprisitngly. And now for linkspam research:
PoV
Other products
2.008 Yoyos
In order of awesomeness / completeness of online documentation:
shiny |
Or, harvest your own glowing bacteria for <$10 using everyday kitchen ingredients / equipment. This’ll be a post-in-progress. But the gist is this:
Acknowledgement~
This idea sparked from a post by Macowell (of DIYbio-boston):
http://www.bioluminopedia.info/apps/blog/show/3050879-culturing-bioluminescent-microbes
with pictures on Flickr:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/macowell/sets/72157623216167176/
However, I found the post sparse on some crucial details and the author unresponsive to email, and the DIYbio-boston group seems to be older-than-undergraduate people. Ah well. Anyway, I’m carrying through, and have run 3 variations so far, one of which produced glowing bacteria! yay.
The variations:
Cool pictures:
http://www.biology.pl/bakterie_sw/bac_hp_en.html
See how strong the light can be:
http://www.huntercole.org/artgallery/livinglightphotographyvideo/index.html