Events
dorkbot-boston 200907 special meeting at TOMB by 5 Wits, Inc.
by emily on Jul.18, 2009, under Events
FREE EVENT
Tue, July 28, 7-9PM
TOMB by 5 Wits, Inc.
186 Brookline Avenue in Boston
Directions:
Take the Green Line to the Fenway stop. This requires taking the D-train, all others branch off one stop earlier in Kenmore square.
Exit the T and cross over the tracks into the parking lot of the Landmark Center (you will see a big Bed, Bath & Beyond on your left). Walk around to the front side of the building, which faces Brookline Avenue. * 5 Wits is directly across the street from the Best Buy and the Regal Fenway 13 movie theater.
dorkbot-boston is a monthly gathering of people doing strange things with electricity. Artists, designers, engineers, students, scientists, hackers and anyone else interested in the creative use of electricity are encouraged to attend. dorkbot meetings are free, family-friendly and open to the public. Bring your projects, in whatever state they are in, and bring 10 friends!
This summer, dorkbot will present: hands-on workshops, outdoor hacking events (Breadboards and BBQ), tours of interactive entertainment venues, and internationally known tinkerers. To participate, please visit dorkbot-boston and join our mailing list. Many thanks to 5 Wits, Inc. for hosting our July meeting.
5 Wits’ premier show, TOMB, is a 45-minute interactive adventure experience set in an incredibly realistic pharaoh’s tomb in an archaeological dig site in ancient Egypt.
At the dorkbot meeting, you’ll have the chance to go through the TOMB and then hear from its designers and engineers about how they implemented the special effects and “gags” you just experienced in the show. We’ll get to look behind the scenes and see details of the build process for one of our newest installations.
Our presenter:
- Schulyer Towne is the in-house graphic and web designer for 5 Wits, Inc. He is a recognized expert in the art of speed lock picking (”locksport”) & is the Executive Editor for Non-Destructive Entry Magazine.
dorkbot-boston 200906 at Axiom – Lilypad, Creative Cad, Interactive Projections
by admin on Jun.10, 2009, under Events
dorkbot-boston 200906 at Axiom
http://www.dorkbotboston.com
FREE EVENT
Tue, June 30, 7-9PM
Axiom Gallery for New and Experimental Media
141 GREEN STREET
Directions:
AXIOM is located on the ground floor level of the Green Street Subway
(”T”) station on the Orange line, at the corner of Amory and Green
Streets in Jamaica Plain, MA
dorkbot-boston is a monthly gathering of people doing strange things with electricity. Artists, designers, engineers, students, scientists, hackers and anyone else interested in the creative use of electricity are encouraged to attend. dorkbot meetings are free, family-freindly and open to the public. Bring your projects, in whatever state they are in, and bring 10 friends!
This summer, dorkbot will present: hands-on workshops, outdoor hacking events (Breadboards and BBQ), tours of interactive entertainment venues, and internationally known tinkerers. To participate, please visit dorkbotboston.com and join our mailing list.
dorkbot-boston is thrilled to be working with Axiom Gallery for New and Experimental Media to host our June meeting.
Our presenters:
Leah Buechley is an Assistant Professor at the MIT Media Lab where she directs the High-Low Tech research group. The High-Low Tech group explores the integration of high and low technology from cultural, material, and practical perspectives, with the goal of engaging diverse groups of people in developing their own technologies. Leah is a well-known expert in the field of electronic textiles (e-textiles), and her work in this area includes developing a method for creating cloth printed circuit boards (fabric PCBs) and designing the commercially available LilyPad Arduino toolkit.
Gideon Weisz is a jeweler, sculptor, and hacker working in Allston, Somerville and Cambridge. At the 200905 dorkbot, he demonstrated his beautifully mysterious Linked Boxes (http://gideonweisz.com/album/shadowboxing/). He will be sharing some of his work along with tips and techniques for fabrication.
“Most of my work is inspired by forms from nature, math and science, exploring symmetry, complexity and topology. I’m fascinated by knots, fractals, polyhedra, proteins, molecular structures, and trees. I create jewelry and sculpture in sterling silver, platinum and gold, using fabrication and lost wax casting techniques. I both carve wax models by hand, and model rings in CAD, creating them with a 3D wax printer or a CNC mill. I am currently building an Arduino based CNC wax carving machine. I also work at a larger scale in steel rod (diameter 1/4″-1/2″), welding with both an oxy-acetylene torch and TIG.”
Brian Knep is a new-media artist who uses science and technology to explore change, healing, struggle, and acceptance. Often his works are dynamic and respond to changes in their environment. Some are simply aware of the passage of time while others are interactive, sensing and reacting to the people around them. Knep has had solo shows at the New Britain Museum of American Art, the University of Massachusetts, Lowell and Arizona State University and has been part of group shows at the Milwaukee Art Museum, Laval Virtual in France, MobileArt in Sweden, and the Insa Art Center in Korea, among others. His works have won awards from Ars Electronica, Americans for the Arts, AICA/New England and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. In 2005 Knep became the first artist-in-residence at Harvard Medical School in a program co-sponsored by Harvard’s Office for the Arts. Knep lives and works in Boston and is represented by Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, NY and Judi Rotenberg Gallery, Boston.
OpenDork – Everyone is encouraged to bring your own recently completed or projects-in-progress for OpenDork, a lightning round-the-room session of peer-review and general showing-off. Art and technology projects at all stages (sketchbook to polished) and of all levels of complexity are welcomed. This is the perfect chance to say, “Hey, I’m trying to do something interesting… here is what I’ve got so far. Can anyone offer suggestions to move forward?”
dorkbot-boston 200905 wooden pong, latte printer, mbta search tool, makerbot
by admin on May.19, 2009, under Events
Tue, May 26, 7-9PM
Microsoft New England Research & Development Center
First Floor
One Memorial Drive, Cambridge
Directions:
http://microsoftcambridge.com/About/Directions/tabid/89/Default.aspx
- On the T, take the Red Line to the Kendall/MIT stop.
- Walk straight up Main Street toward the Longfellow Bridge (past the Post Office, Bank of America).
- You will see the Parking Garage on your right, Take a right and you can enter the building from the side
Dorkbot-boston is a monthly gathering of people doing strange things with electricity. Bring your projects, in whatever state they are in, and bring 10 friends!
Thank you Microsoft Cambridge (http://microsoftcambridge.com) for opening up their venue to us this month and for supporting local makers and user groups!
This month’s presenters:
Michael Soroka (http://michaelsoroka.com/), inventor of the Electro-mechanical Pong Table, is a Research Engineer at the Autonomous Underwater Vehicle Laboratory at MIT’s Sea Grant College Program (http://seagrant.mit.edu/). Among his many projects at MIT is the Sea Perch, an underwater remotely operated vehicle (ROV) that teachers and students can build to learn about robotics, physics, and water sampling. When he’s not building autonomous subs, he can be found designing and building furniture, wooden puzzles, tesla coils and other mechatronics (see http://mikesoroka.squarespace.com/mechatronics/)
(rescheduled from Feb) Oleksiy Pikalo (http://opikalo.wordpress.com/) is an independent inventor and artist who created a machine that can print intricate designs on lattes or other foamy beverages. At dorkbot, he will talk about the design process and technical challenges for building this artwork and demonstrate the device on tasty drinks. He’s turned this idea into a business (http://onlatte.com) and he will talk about how that process has been going.
W. Aaron Waychoff is a network engineer and software developer and inventor of the iSrch Rndmzr 3000(tm), (http://subvertedindustries.com/) a speculative object that explores the social implications of “random” MBTA searches of riders. He will be talking about the project, and will share some tips on how to take an idea from a breadboard prototype to an object that actually looks great.
Jimmie Rodgers (http://blog.jimmieprodgers.com/) designs toys and electronics kits and is the organizer for Noise Night (http://www.noisenight.com), a bi-monthly gathering of people enthusiastic about electronic music and circuit bending. At the May dorkbot, he will give the group an update (and, fingers crossed, a demo) on the recent Makerbot acquisition and build.
OpenDork – Everyone is encouraged to bring your own recently completed or projects-in-progress for OpenDork, a lightning round-the-room session of peer-review and general showing-off. Art and technology projects at all stages (sketchbook to polished) and of all levels of complexity are welcomed. This is the perfect chance to say, “Hey, I’m trying to do something interesting… here is what I’ve got so far. Can anyone offer suggestions to move forward?”
dorkbot-diyCHI 2009
by admin on Apr.02, 2009, under Events
Held in conjunction with a workshop at the 27th annual conference on Human-Computer Interaction (CHI)
What do glitter and glue, needles and thread, batteries and wires have to do with Human Computer Interaction? What can makers and crafters teach technology researchers and designers about the world and technology? How can CHI researchers engage with Do-It-Yourself communities? This session will be a dialogue about the relationships between academia and DIY communities. It will include presentations from the workshop organizers and participants who will demo and discuss their own DIY projects and then use them as springboards for open discussions with the audience. Come to see some interesting projects and to share your own insights and experiences.
When: 7:00pm Tuesday April 7
Where: Bartos Theater, Lower Level, MIT Media Lab (E15), MIT campus
Map: http://whereis.mit.edu/map-jpg?selection=E15&Buildings=go
Free and open to the public.
Leah Buechley is an Assistant Professor at the MIT Media Lab where she directs the High-Low Tech research group. The High-Low Tech group explores the integration of high and low technology from cultural, material, and practical perspectives, with the goal of engaging diverse groups of people in developing their own technologies. Leah is a well-known expert in the field of electronic textiles (e-textiles), and her work in this area includes developing a method for creating cloth printed circuit boards (fabric PCBs) and designing the commercially available LilyPad Arduino toolkit.
Eric Paulos is an Assistant Professor in the Human-Computer Interaction Institute within the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University. Previously he was Senior Research Scientist at Intel in Berkeley, California where he founded the Urban Atmospheres research group – challenged to employ innovative methods to explore urban life and the future fabric of emerging technologies across public urban landscapes. His areas of expertise span a deep body of research territory in urban computing, sustainability, green design, environmental awareness, social telepresence, robotics, physical computing, interaction design, persuasive technologies, and intimate media.
Daniela Rosner is a graduate student at the School of Information at UC Berkeley. Her research focuses on how the design of social cues in information technology impact our interactions. She investigates how technology can support and strengthen ties between people using the artifacts they create.
Amanda Williams is a PhD student at UC Irvine. Her research interests are in the general area of Human-Computer Interaction, including but not limited to ubiquitous computing in urban environments, tangible user interfaces, computer mediated communication, and how Irvine got to be such a bizarre planned community. “If this whole HCI thing doesn’t work out, I’ll likely spend my time snowboarding and running a pi(e) shop.”
dorkbot-boston 200903 – Gilad Lotan, Todd Vanderlin
by admin on Mar.20, 2009, under Events
dorkbot-boston 200903
http://www.dorkbotboston.com
FREE EVENT
Tue, Mar 31, 7-9PM
Willoughby&Baltic Hackerspace
195 Elm Street, Somerville.
(Davis Square, alley between Joey’s Thai & the Subway sandwich shop)
Dorkbot-boston is a monthly gathering of people doing strange things with electricity. Bring your projects, in whatever state they are in, and bring 10 friends!
This months presenters:
-
Todd Vanderlin (www.toddvanderlin.com) is an artist, designer, and technologist at the R&D Lab at Arnold, a Boston based new media agency. A graduate of Parsons School of Design, his research involves exploring touch and flocking interfaces, eye tracking, large-scale projections, computer vision, and sensory design. Todd is also a key contributor to the openFrameworks project (openframeworks.cc), a software toolkit for creative coding and art. His recent work includes software experiments w/ iPhoto, interactive projections, touchable sound installations, and a drawing robot.
-
Gilad Lotan (http://www.giladlotan.com) is an artist, designer, and technologist at Microsoft Startup Labs, Cambridge. He is passionate about the intersection between culture, technology, and spatial design, made possible through interactive design. Previous work includes imPulse — a technological interface for augmenting intimate moments between people at a distance by allowing users to share their pulse with one another, stage design for Faust International Theater, Hong Kong, and Kotel — an installation that uses 3d technology and touch sensors embedded within a rock to interact with live images from the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem. Some of his work from his time at NYU-ITP is featured in Tom Igoe’s “Making Things Talk”
“My background is in both computer science and design and my professional identity centers around bridging these two worlds. I am a seasoned traveler, anxious to learn about and experience new ideals and cultures. While I dream of a network that connects us all, social and cultural barriers are reproduced online. People tend to stay in their familiar neighborhoods, even when consuming through the safety of their screens. My goal is to create work that takes down these existing walls, and presents its viewers with a new perception for a diversity of cultural perspectives.”
- OpenDork – Everyone is encouraged to bring your own recently completed or projects-in-progress for OpenDork, a lightning round-the-room session of peer-review and general showing-off. Art and technology projects at all stages (sketchbook to polished) and of all levels of complexity are welcomed. This is the perfect chance to say, “Hey, I’m trying to do something interesting… here is what I’ve got so far. Can anyone offer suggestions to move forward?”
dorkbot-boston 200902 – Latte Printer, SMT mounting, opendork
by admin on Feb.20, 2009, under Events
dorkbot-boston 200902
http://www.dorkbotboston.com
FREE EVENT
Tue, Feb 24, 7-9PM
Willoughby&Baltic Hackerspace
195 Elm Street, Somerville.
(Davis Square, alley between Joey’s Thai & the Subway sandwich shop)
Dorkbot-boston is a monthly gathering of people doing strange things with electricity. Bring your projects, in whatever state they are in, and bring 10 friends!
This months presenters:
-
Oleksiy Pikalo (http://opikalo.wordpress.com/) is an independent inventor and artist who created a machine that can print intricate designs on lattes or other foamy beverages. At dorkbot, he will talk about the design process and technical challenges for building this artwork and demonstrate the device on tasty drinks. He’s turned this idea into a business (http://onlatte.com) and he will talk about how that process has been going.
“Long time ago, I saw a great video about ‘Latte Art’, and figured that I absolutely must build a machine capable of printing the most beautiful art on top of my latte. So I bought a used x-y flatbed plotter (Philips 8155) on eBay and a great book by Matt Gilliland, titled ‘Inkjet Applications’ I put the two together, to get this nice Latte Art Printing Machine.”
-
Ryan O’Hara is an engineer and owner of an independent design firm focused on unique consumer electronics (ohararp.com). At Maker Faire, he gave live demonstrations of how to use stencils and hotplate to include SMT (Surface Mount Technology) components in art projects. Since SMT has come up on the mailing list a few times, Ryan has graciously offered to give us tips and techniques that should help clear up how we might approach using SMT in our own pieces.
-
OpenDork – Everyone is encouraged to bring your own recently completed or projects-in-progress for OpenDork, a lightning round-the-room session of peer-review and general showing-off. Art and technology projects at all stages (sketchbook to polished) and of all levels of complexity are welcomed. This is the perfect chance to say, “Hey, I’m trying to do something interesting… here is what I’ve got so far. Can anyone offer suggestions to move forward?”
Also mark your calendars:
- [03/07] Deadline: Dorkbot-Seattle Strange Things – http://dorkbot.org/dorkbotsea/events/pdstwe4/callforartists.shtml
- [03/31 7PM] Dorkbot-Boston 200903
Dorkbot mailing list for art/technology event announcements and discussion:
Dorkbot 200901 Jan 27 @7PM – Drawdio, mmmtss, robot lobsters
by admin on Jan.21, 2009, under Events
dorkbot-boston 200901
http://www.dorkbotboston.com
Tue, Jan 27, 7-9PM
Willoughby&Baltic Hackerspace
197a Elm Street, Somerville.
(Davis Square, above the Subway sandwich shop)
Dorkbot-boston kicks off the 2009 season with its first gathering in
Somerville.
Jay Silver (http://web.media.mit.edu/~silver/) is an artist, engineer,
and seeker working in the Lifelong Kindergarden group at the MIT Media
Lab. He recently invented the Drawdio (www.drawdio.com), a pencil
that lets you draw music. He was inspired to create Drawdio by
watching schoolchildren in the slums of Bangalore play with a modified
harmonium kit. His prior work includes studies of the urban jungle,
art that encourages human-to-human physical contact, and visual essays
about creative property rights. He was raised by a pack of hippies
and midwives.
Eric Rosenbaum’s (http://ericrosenbaum.com) interests include
collaborative learning in shared spaces, authenticity in learning
environments, musical improvisation for novices, and learning through
constructing science simulations. His projects have included Scratch
for Second Life, Shake and Play Duplo bricks for experimenting with
sound, motion and light, and MmmTsss playful looping software. Before
coming to the Lifelong Kindergarden group at the MIT Media Lab, Eric
did research in auditory neuroscience, created animations for music
education, worked on molecular dynamics simulation software for high
school science students, and developed augmented reality games for
science education.
David Nunez (http://www.davidnunez.com) is a freelance software artist
recently transplanted from Texas where he organized dorkbot-austin.
He will share what it’s like to do consulting for children’s museums
as he discusses the design and development of an animatronic lobster
for a soon-to-be launched exhibit at the Houston Children’s Museum,
part of an expansion that will encourage kids to explore programming
and tinkering. Previously, he developed the multi-touch table
interface for Eric Archer’s Electric Gongs at the Austin Children’s
museum (http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2008/07/electric_gongs.html)
and his robot marionette, El Quemira, won several blue ribbons at the
2007 Austin Maker Faire.
OpenDork – Everyone is encouraged to bring your own recently completed
or projects-in-progress for OpenDork, a lightning round-the-room
session of peer-review and general showing-off. Art and technology
projects at all stages (sketchbook to polished) and of all levels of
complexity are welcomed. This is the perfect chance to say, “Hey, I’m
trying to do something interesting… here is what I’ve got so far.
Can anyone offer suggestions to move forward?”
Also mark your calendars:
dorkbot-boston 200902 – 2/24 @ 7PM
dorkbot-boston 200903 – 3/31 @ 7PM
Dorkbot mailing list for art/technology event announcements and discussion:
http://groups.google.com/group/DorkbotBoston
Upcoming Events and Resources Jan 15
by admin on Jan.15, 2009, under Events
(Unless otherwise noted, these are all free and open to the public and appropriate for all ages. Please check the organization sites for updates.)
- Jan 15 – 7PM: Arduino Users Group Meeting @ Willoughby&Baltic Hackerspace, 197a Elm Street, Somerville
- Jan 16 – 730AM: The State of the Robotics Industry in New England @ Charles Hotel, Regatta Bar, 1 Bennett St, Cambridge
- Jan 19 – 1-4PM: Celebrate Luminous Windows (light and holography art) (free w/ museum admission) @ MIT Museum(K)
- Jan 19 – 7PM: Theremin: An Electronic Odyssey (http://www.coolidge.org/node/2163) ($)
- Jan 20 – 1230PM: Talk: Peter Semmelhack of Bug Labs @ Berkman Center, 23 Everett Street, 2nd floor (R)
- Jan 20 – 6PM: Cyberarts Festival Volunteer Party Party! @ 9 Myrtle Street, Jamaica Plain (RSVP: info@bostoncyberarts.org)
- Jan 21 – 7PM: Nano Robotics Applications in Modern Medicine @ CRMI ($/)
- Jan 22 – 7PM: Noise Night – Circuit Bending @ Willoughby&Baltic Hackerspace, 197a Elm Street, Somerville
- Jan 23-25: Vericon Scifi, Gaming, Anime con (http://www.vericon.org) ($R)
- Jan 27 – 7PM: Dorkbot-Boston 200901 (location tbd)
- Feb 8 – 9AM-2PM: NewBCamp (http://www.newbcamp.com/)
- Feb 12 – 5PM: Ignite Boston 5 @ The Hooley House, 25 Union St., Boston (R)
- Feb 12 – 7PM: Noise Night – Circuit Bending @ Willoughby&Baltic Hackerspace, 197a Elm Street, Somerville
- Feb 16 – Feb 21: National Engineering Week: Robotics (K) @ MIT Museum
- Feb 24 – 7PM: Dorkbot-Boston 200902 (location tbd)
- Feb 25 – 630P: Democamp Boston (http://www.eventbrite.com/event/238695946)
- Feb 26 – 7PM: Noise Night – Circuit Bending @ Willoughby&Baltic Hackerspace, 197a Elm Street, Somerville
- Feb 28 – 7PM: Boston Robotics February Meetup @ Willoughby&Baltic Hackerspace, 197a Elm Street, Somerville
- Mar 31 – 7PM: Dorkbot-Boston 200903 (location tbd)
- Apr 4-9: CHI 2009 (www.chi2009.org)
- Apr 24-26: Megapolis Audio Art & Documentary Festival (megapolisfestival.org)
- Apr 24- May 10: Boston Cyberarts (bostoncyberarts.org)
(/) – Links to more info below (R) – RSVP required ($) – Not Free (K) – Especially great for kids
Calls For Art / Deadlines (local unless otherwise specified)
- ASAP: Boston Cyberarts Festival: email to info@bostoncyberarts.org: bostoncyberarts.org
- Feb 6: share.tv – performance-based artists working in experimental media (sound, video art, net.art, new musical interfaces, etc.): http://share-tv.us/
- Feb 11: Megapolis Festival (Audio focus) Performances, presentations, and workshop submissions: megapolisfestival.org/blogalogadingdong/?page_id=3
- Feb 18: SIGGRAPH (New Orleans)- BioLogic Art, Emerging Tech: http://www.siggraph.org/s2009/galleries_experiences/index.php
- Mar 13: Tufts gallery: http://www.wickedlocal.com/somerville/homepage/x512387111/Tufts-gallery-seeking-artists-for-juried-summer-show
Classes and Workshops (most are not free)
- Willoughby & Baltic Classes (ex. ArtBot, Arduino for Artists, Urban Games): http://www.willoughbybaltic.com/home/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&id=46&Itemid=120
- MIT Independent Activities Period (Jan 5-Jan 30): http://web.mit.edu/iap/
Links & details
- Dorkbot-boston: www.dorkbotboston.com
- Nano Robotics Applications in Modern Medicine- Charles River Museum of Industry & Innovation (http://crmi.org) @ 154 Moody Street, Waltham, MA 02453 – Admission: $10.00 7:30 PM – What used to be medical science fiction is now reality! Join us for an engaging discussion by Dr. Dinos Mavroidis, Director of the Biomedical Mechatronics Laboratory at Northeastern University. Professor Mavroidis will explain how science is fusing nano technology with biological tissue to aid in diagnosing and curing diseases. His international team of experts are using tiny robots smaller than atoms to conduct MRIs, repair bad blood cells, and deliver drugs from inside the body.