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dorkbot-boston 201001 – special event with AwesomeFoundation
by admin on Jan.12, 2010, under Uncategorized
Awesome Foundation for Arts and Sciences and dorkbot-boston Present:
Lauren McCarthy: Tools for Improved Social Interacting
http://lauren-mccarthy.com/socialinteracting/
Talk and Reception
FREE EVENT
Fri, Jan 15, 7-9PM
sprout – 339R Summer St, Somerville
Directions:
Talk at sprout’s offices which are at 339R Summer Street just outside of Davis Square in Somerville, MA. It’s set back from the street, down the driveway to the right of 339 Summer Street; the “R” means “Rear.”
Map: http://thesprouts.org/contact
Reception to follow at The Spirit Bar (2046 Mass Ave, Cambridge) — Mass Ave and Creighton near Porter Square, just across the street from the Hess station.
http://thespiritbars.com
Lauren McCarthy will present her latest work of wearable devices at the next dorkbot-boston on January 15, 7PM at the offices of sprout at 339R Summer St, Somerville.
Funded in part by The Awesome Foundation, her Tools for Improved Social Interacting are items of clothing that use sensors and electronics to train the wearer to better adapt to expected social behaviors.
Guests are encouraged to bring their own projects to participate in OpenDork after her talk, a show-and-tell of people doing strange things with electricity – art and technology projects at all stages (sketchbook to polished) and of all levels of complexity are welcomed.
A reception will follow The Spirit Bar (2046 Mass Ave, Cambridge) where guests can try out Lauren’s devices.
Lauren McCarthy’s Tools for Improved Social Interacting are a “Series of wearable devices that use sensors to condition the behavior of the wearer to better adapt to expected social behaviors.”
The Happiness Hat http://lauren-mccarthy.com/happinesshat/ trains the wearer to smile more. An enclosed bend sensor attaches to the cheek and measures smile size, a servo motor moves a metal spike into the head inversely proportional to the degree of smile. The smile size data is logged on a microSD memory card for download at the end of each use period.
The Anti-Daydreaming Scarf contains a heat radiation sensor that detects if the wearer is engaged in conversation with another person. While he is, the scarf vibrates periodically to remind the wearer to pay attention and stop daydreaming.
The Body Contact Training Suit requires the wearer to maintain frequent body contact with another person in order to hear normally. If the wearer stops touching someone for too long, static noise begins to play through headphones sewn into hood. A capacitance sensing circuit measures skin to skin body contact via a metal bracelet sewn into the sleeve.
- Lauren McCarthy is a designer, artist, and programmer, and currently an MFA student in the UCLA Design | Media Arts program. She received a BS in Computer Science ad a BS in Art and Design from MIT. Her work explores the structures and systems of social interactions, identity, and self-representation. She is interested in the slightly uncomfortable moments when patterns are shifted, expectations are broken, and participants become aware of the system. Her work takes any form necessary: video, performance, software, internet art, interactive objects and environments, and media installations.
Lauren was most recently working at Small Design Firm on projects for the US Holocaust Memorial Museum, Thomas Jefferson’s home at Monticello, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. She has also worked at Continuum and the MIT Media Lab.
Founded in June 2009, The Awesome Foundation for the Arts and Sciences awards $1,000 grants monthly to projects that advance the interest of Awesomeness in our universe. There are no requirements for applying, no definite criteria for deciding the winner, and no limitations beyond the necessity for being awesome. Winners receive the money in cash, check, or gold doubloons, no strings attached. To learn more or apply, get on over to http://awesomefoundation.org
dorkbot-boston is a monthly meeting of artists (sound/image/movement/whatever), designers, engineers, students, scientists, and other interested parties from the boston area who are involved in the creative use of electricity. dorkbot meetings are free and open to the public. http://dorkbotboston.com
sprout is a group of learners and teachers working to inspire the practice of everyday experimentalism by running science programs that are embedded in the community–drawing inspiration and resources from the people, places, and things that surround us everyday! http://thesprouts.org
Dorkbot-Boston – OpenProject night
by admin on Nov.12, 2009, under Uncategorized
We are hosting an OpenProject session from 7PM-11PM on Tuesday November 17th at the Sprout/DINO shared space [339R Summer St. Somerville, MA 02144].
We are having two fantastically productive and prolific makers be in the space to demo their work and help you with yours:
Josh Gordonson Josh is a sophomore at MIT who’s recently received the Awesome Foundation’s Awesome grant, which will go towards creating several cotton candy guns, exposing the world to the horrors of ‘polysaccharide warfare’. For the past few years he’s been working on wearables (soft-circuits), time keeping devices (eddy current clock and others), and cotton candy machines (both standard and projectile). In the past few weeks, he has become deeply interested in learning how to integrate electronics with biological systems. On the average day, he enjoys embedding himself in nature, learning, and pondering the path towards our inevitable robot overlords.
Past and Present projects:
- http://www.instructables.com/member/T3h_Muffinator
- http://blog.awesomefoundation.org/post/205869776/october-awesome-fellowship-the-cotton-candy-cannon
Star Simpson Star is a mysterious and oft-sought after inventor of things previously never seen on this planet. Known to use any means necessary to accomplish her goals of making things both wacky and useful, Star delights in the using tools, from welders to wire nuts, and beyond.
Past and Present projects:
We also have a huge selection of tools and materials at the space so come with ideas or things half-made and be creative!
dorkbot-boston 200908 – special event with Upgrade!Boston
by admin on Aug.09, 2009, under Uncategorized
FREE Special Event
dorkbot-boston and Upgrade! Boston present Douglas Repetto
Mon, August 17, 7-9 p.m.
Microsoft New England Research & Development Center
1 Memorial Drive in 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. 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.
dorkbot is thrilled to be working with Upgrade! Boston, a monthly gathering of artists, curators, and the public that fosters dialogue and creates opportunities for collaboration within the new media community, and Microsoft NERD to host our August meeting.
Presenter: Douglas Irving Repetto is the Director of Research at the Computer Music Center of Columbia University, where he also teaches a wide variety of classes including sculpting, electroacoustics, and music engineering, and the founder of the original dorkbot. He has become an international figure for also founding ArtBots, an international art exhibition for robotic art and art-making robots, organism:making art with living systems, a group blog of artists and scientists using biotechnology to create art, and MUSIC-DSP, a mailing list and website hosted by the California Institue of Arts that is used to share music and sound related digital signal processing (DSP) strategies, techniques, and code. Mr. Repetto has also collaborated with LoVid in the creation of “Bonding Engery”, a set of “sunsmile” devices that collect and measure solar energy from seven sites in New York state, and in work on the Cross Current Resonance Transducer, a solar energy to sound and movement transducer.
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?”
More Event Info at Upgrade!Boston
Welcome new dorkbot-boston overlord Emily Daniels
by admin on May.04, 2009, under Uncategorized
I have a really awesome announcement to make this morning.
A few weeks ago, I made a plea for some help organizing dorkbot gatherings and am thrilled to let you know that Emily Daniels has stepped up to help w/ dorkbot-boston!
She is a multimedia artist, tool-maker, community organizer and educator based in the Boston area. After earning a BFA in painting and printmaking from Massachusetts College of Art and Design, she went on to become the School Director of Kaplan Aspect – Harvard Square and has since developed and established the school as a leader in ESL education. Her more recent projects involve creating interactive robots that express emotions or thoughts in order to generate empathy and make a more approachable and personable experience with computing machines.
What impresses me about Emily is her commitment to community building and figuring out ways to break down the artificial barriers between various art/tech/hacker/school/etc groups around Boston. She speaks passionately about her own work but is equally enthusiastic about other people and their projects. She has an attitude of collaboration and has already proven it through things like organizing a talk at Barcamp about hackergroups and spaces, collecting resources to share with dorkbot members, and evangelizing on behalf of what crazy things people are doing with electricity.
It’s great to have her on board! We’re already starting to work on the
next few dorkbot meetings, some dorkbot field trips, free workshops
and lots of other strange activities to fill your summer.
With that being said: If you’re ever interested in helping organize dorkbot-boston or even just want to offer suggestions for speakers, venues, or activities, then the door is wide open for anyone willing to step up!
Christy Georg to Discuss Kinetic Art at October Gathering
by admin on Oct.02, 2008, under Uncategorized
Click to view Christy’s website.
Typewriters that argue with each other, mobile phonographs, and a device that tunes its own sounds are among Christy Georg’s artwork she will discuss at the October 7, 2008 gathering of Dorkbot Boston at the Charles River Museum of Industry in Waltham, MA. The talk is free and open to the public.
Christy Georg is an artist specializing in kinetic sculpture. Christy Georg has been called “a sculptor of wit and ingenuity, clearly in the tradition of Jean Tinguely and Bruce Nauman, but brilliantly original in her use of existential humor to invigorate the works” by sculptor Rob Fisher. Born in Chicago and raised in Houston, she received her MFA from Massachusetts College of Art, her BFA from the Kansas City Art Institute, and studied glassblowing at the Pacific Northwest College of Art. She has exhibited widely, having solo exhibitions at the Contemporary Artists Center in North Adams, the Roswell Museum, Gettysburg College, and University of Massachusetts at Lowell. She has been awarded residencies at SculptureSpace, Ross Creek Art Center in Nova Scotia, Fine Arts Work Center, Vermont Studio Center, Boston’s Berwick Research Institute, Roswell AIR program, and the MacDowell Colony.
When: October 7, 2008 – 7:00 PM
Where: Charles River Museum of Industry 154 Moody Street Waltham, MA (Directions)
DorkbotBoston West Meeting-September 2nd
by admin on Aug.18, 2008, under Uncategorized
DorkbotBoston will begin holding a monthly meeting at the Charles River museum of Industry and Innovation starting on September 2nd, 2008 at 7:00. Meetings will be held on the first Tuesday of every month at this new Waltham location.
For those people who cannot make it to Waltham, or are allergic to the Charles River, you can come to our local Dorkbot meetings in Somerville on the third Tuesday of every month.
DorkbotBoston welcomes David Nunez
by admin on Aug.18, 2008, under Uncategorized
WoooHooo! DorkbotAustin’s loss is our gain!
The former overlord of DorkbotAustin arrived at our doorstep, ready to do some lording over, so me made him the co-overlord of DorkbotBoston! Please welcome David by coming to his welcome party on Tuesday, August 19th at 6:30.
Next Meeting, July 16th at 7:00
by admin on Jul.12, 2008, under Uncategorized
Our next meeting will be July 16th at 7:00 at Willoughby and Baltic. Bring your projects and byob.
willoughby and baltic 195g elm stree somerville, ma 02144
Jimmie P. Rodgers and John Luciani at Ignite
by admin on Jun.17, 2008, under Uncategorized
Leave a Comment more...Boston Arduino Users Group Meeting-Sat. June 21 at 3pm
by admin on Jun.17, 2008, under Uncategorized
The Boston Arduino Users Group meeting has been scheduled for Saturday, June 21st at 3pm. We usually meet at 2pm, but we need to push it back an hour to allow for the neighbor’s yard sale which is happening out front. We’ll be meeting at Willoughby and Baltic at 195g Elm Street, Davis Square. Bring your Arduino projects and Arduino parts and byob.
