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MAKE MUNICH WAS amazing

It was a good weekend to be geeky in Bavaria. In addition to our own Hackaday prize Bring-a-Hack party, there was the reason that we scheduled it in the first place, Munich’s independent diy expo, Make Munich.

If you’re a devoted Hackaday reader, lots of of the projects would seem uncannily familiar. I walked in and was greeted by some stunning word clocks in both German and English, for instance. Still, seeing the open Theremin being sold with an “as seen on Hackaday” sticker made us smile. and then we had a terrific conversation about [Urs Gaudenz]’s other project: diy biological apparatus, also seen on Hackaday.

There were robots galore. someone (from Gmünd?) was driving around a graffiti-bot and spraying the floor with water instead of paint or chalk to very great effect. The full evolution of the Zoobotics robot family was on display. even the Calliope (a German version of the micro:bit) booth had this cute Bluetooth vibrobot. join me after the break as I dive into all of the terrific stuff on display over the weekend.

Twenty to Five: Zehn Nach Halb Funf
As seen on Hackaday
Calliope Vibrobot
Water Graffiti
Zoobotics: 3D print, cardboard, and paper

Hackerspaces

There seems to be nothing a hackerspace can’t make with a laser cutter, and that now includes skateboard wheels. Munich maker lab sent theirs to Braille skateboarding (YouTube) who skate it for a very long while until it finally succumbs.

The Munich CCC hackerspace has the largest flip-dot display I’ve seen in person, and it was running a game of pong, but the details are where it gets cool. It was controlled by r0ket badges from the 28th Chaos communications Congress, sending RF at 2.4 GHz to the SDR rad1o badges from the 2015 CCCamp, which did all the decoding in GNURadio. how diy is that?

Not to be outdone on the flip-dot front, the hackerspace from nearby Augsburg got a few panels and through some software trickery achieved stellar smooth animations. turns out that because of gravity, different pulses are optimal for setting and resetting a bit. The Augsburgers also only update pixels when they change, minimizing power consumption. sehr schlau.

Among other projects from a hackerspace attached to the technical university in Aachen (RWTH) was this excellent vest of vibration motors, intended to help blind people navigate better. space is mapped intuitively across the 2D matrix, and distance is encoded as vibrational intensity. This would make a good project for the Hackaday Prize.

flip All the Dots — muCCC
Munich maker Lab: Next, laser-cut trucks!
3D Cubes on Flipdots — Augsburg
Vibrational Vest for the Blind

Reality, Workshops, and Contraptions

If participation in a diy fair is any barometer, we may have passed through height 3D printer, and are entering into an era of neat experimentation with augmented and virtual reality — there was a whole row of goggle-based projects that just don’t come across well in photos. Still, some AR projects had bigger screens, like this game of pong that relied on detecting colored oven mitts, and was a terrific piece of interaction design.

But I’m a little jaded by the virtual, and a lot more thrilled by crazy mechanical contraptions. At two adjacent booths, I saw an incredible violin-playing robot (here it is on YouTube in action) and some functional steampunk art/devices from Skulls N Gears that legitimize the genre, as far as I’m concerned. The printer that went along with this computer is a modified typewriter and was click-clackily printing out Chuck Norris facts in German as we walked by. Es war fantastisch.

Around the corner were some workshops, including kids with lathes (courtesy of Unimat) and a free-for-all of hot glue and junk electronics parts labelled “Post-Apocalyptic Jewelery”. There were printing presses and soldering stations, and normally too much to do.

And then there was the paper-airplane maker gun. Actually, there were three versions on display. Yes, there were paper jams, and [Dieter] had to restrain himself from covering the floor too deep with his flyers (tee-hee!), but enjoying the maker do its work was fantastic. check out the linked video in our article.

I’m still scratching my head about the cardboard tube with LEDs and a coconut on the end that was making very interesting noises. The owner of the booth was out having dinner, so I didn’t get to ask exactly what goes on at the “Center for alternative Coconut Research”.

Violinautomat
Steampunk done right!
kids with Lathes
Post-Apocalyptic Jewelery
Paper Airplane maker (Gun)
center for alternative Coconut research

Hebocon

Which brings us to the Hebocon. [Brian Benchoff] has waxed poetic about Hebocons before, so I don’t need to. The point is that it’s hilariousinklusive und freaky auf bestmögliche Weise. Zwei lebhafte Ansager und eine unzählige Anzahl von “Bots” behielten die Menge interessierten, dass Crappy-Roboter genossen hatten, kämpfende, dass Crappy-Roboter einige der Bettzeit des Publikums kämpfen.

Es ist hier gezeigt, ist “Schratte”, ein Portmanteau-Wort von “Junk” und “Rat” in deutscher Sprache, gegenüber “Affe mit Messer”. Schratte war mein Favorit, weil es der einzige Wanderer des Abends war. Ich kann mich nicht an den Namen des Krokodilbots (Croco-Etwas?) Erinnern, aber es fuhr weiter, um alle Wettbewerber mit seiner anspruchsvollen Frontschaufel aus dem Weg zu drücken: ein Stück Holz.

Affe mit Messer gegen Schratte
Crowd Cheers Croco-etwas

Hack in der Öffentlichkeit!

Gehen Sie also raus und unterstützen Sie Ihre örtliche Macher-Szene! Und wenn Sie keinen haben, machen Sie einen. Denn, auch wenn Sie bereits auf Hackaday darüber gelesen haben, gibt es nichts, was ein Projekt im Fleisch sehen und mit seinem Erbauer plaudern.