Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Little Bit Crazy

People are crazy about LittleBits! On Friday, a flood of people came during Flex period to have fun with the LittleBits pack up in 814. We were having fun building the Super Loud Motion Buzzer to annoy people that entered, and positioned it. Then, a horde of people rushed into the room. They were greeted by the super loud buzzer, which definitely made them annoyed! (See making little bits roar more) There was a huge rush of students, so the modules were taken quick. We started with, "Where's the timeout! I need a pulse! Where is a power module!"
Unlike some other days, when the table was quiet and calm (a. k. a. Buzzers going crazy and lights flashing), this time, there were hands crawling over hands to get to the Little Bits, and people stealing Bits. Soon, the Power Modules ran out, and people were like, "I need a power module!"
All the circuits caused a lot of commotion. There were lights flashing, buzzers buzzing, and fans blowing air. People were experimenting with DC motors, and people were randomly adding modules to modules. But just then, the Bell rang. Everyone rushed to clean up (a bad job) and ran out, ready to come back to experiment with more modules.

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Making Little Bits Roar MORE

If you thought the halloween hack was crazy, this week was even worse. When I popped into the room at the beginning of flex, there were a bunch of LittleBits on the table. Guess what was the most in-demand thing at the table? Of course you guessed it, it was the buzzer.
Last week, there was a lot of light-flickering as us Makers made flickering lights, fans, and more. But this week, the only thing us Makers were thinking was... BUZZERS BUZZERS I WANT ONE TO ANNOY EVERYONE
So my big goal was to make a machine to annoy everyone (will fly with the 4th graders), so I grabbed a power supply, buzzer, button, and a whole bunch of wires. My goal? To make a remote access buzzer, with one end on the Maker desk, the other end near the entrance, and so I could annoy everyone with the machine of buzzing doom. Running wires along the desk was boring, and when I finished, it didn't work! Then I discovered something called the motion sensor, which was awesome.
The buzzer was finished with a motion sensor connected to three buzzers. When anything moved, the circuit went BEEEEEEEEEPPPPPPPPPPPP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Then I put in the hallway and when some seventh graders walked past, it went BEEEEEEEEEPPPPPPPPPPPP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! They said to themselves, "Is it a fire alarm?"

Friday, November 14, 2014

Making Little Bits Roar

Making Little Bits Roar

Here at 814, we were having fun! Some other makers and I were waiting at the small computer lab but nobody came, so we just went up to 814. Up there, @Oliver Z was spamming the #LittleBits. He was putting the noise-making blocks and I was just like, wow. Some Scenario writers were assembled, and they were begging for Oliver to stop. Did he? Nope. In fact, he added more. I grabbed a starting block and started making. Dr. MC said "Make a hand buzzer, Leo can do it!" I grabbed my pieces and had a simple hand buzzer. Three minutes later there was a volume slide, an on and off button, and a toggle switch. I brought it outside and got angry looks from hardworking Scenario Writers and seventh graders. Eventually, Dr. MC told me to go back and so I went back in while Oliver was the most hated maker. The buzzers were buzzing, scenario writers were screaming, just your regular Mini-Maker Friday. I began to create V.2.0.0, I quickly took of the slide and the butten and I just kept my little on-off switch. Meanwhile, Leo and Oliver were making the loudest possible buzzer, Sharanya and Sundar were making a hand buzzer, and Katherine was doing something else. I attached my simple contraption to the battery. It sounded the same as before, but it didn't feel the same, it was lighter and it was blowing air on my face. Why? I had added a fan! I walked outside once again but a scenario writer shooed me away. I tried to add another fan but only one fan worked! I needed more power. Sundar helped me, but before we could make V.3.0.0, the bell rang. I cleaned up my pieces and left. Today was great because we were able to just play around with little bits and learn how to use them.

Maker Home Fun

OK my Maker Ambassadors. Much of what we do is going to be self-paced and online. The makerspace will be open most Fridays and if you need to come up on other days, just shoot me an email!  Not everything that we do in here will appeal to all makers, but that is OK. We will be working this out together!

You have two assignments for the next week -

1) Begin tinkering around in our Khan Academy class

Sign up at khanacademy.org
(or log in if you already have an account).

Visit khanacademy.org/coaches
(the “Coaches” tab in your profile).

In the “Add a coach” field, enter the class code.
Class code: 2BZXF8

You’re set. Now click Home to start learning!


2) Look up the different projects on the littleBits page - http://littlebits.cc/projects

Which ones interest you? Which ones can you make a video tutorial on for your 4th grade class?

I would love for us to build the rover projects and work that out with your proteges. There are some really cool curriculum connections we can build on with those rovers! This will give you all a chance to teach and create.

<iframe width="500" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/61TOjOepI88" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>




FaceTime car instructions




Welcome to maker emporium. We are going to do some really cool work!

Monday, November 3, 2014

White House Ornament Challenge

White House Maker Challenge due 11/10

More information can be found at: http://www.instructables.com/contest/ornamentdesignchallenge/ 


When you’ve got a big house to decorate for the holidays, advanced planning is wise. So naturally, the White House is already thinking about this year’s holiday decor, and we're going to help them deck their halls. Instructables is excited to partner with the Smithsonian and the White House in this 3D Printed Ornament Challenge. Some of the winners of this challenge will have their work printed and hung in the East Wing of the White House during the holiday season. Additionally, those selected to be displayed at the White House will be featured on the Smithsonian’s state of the art 3D data platform, 3d.si.edu and will join a small collection of White House ornaments in the political history division of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.

You don’t need to have a 3D printer to participate — design an ornament with any 3D modeling software and up to 8 winning designs will be 3D printed and shipped to the White House for you. New to 3D modeling? No sweat! Head over to Tinkercad and play around with making 3-dimensional shapes. It’s really fun, and you’ll learn an awesome new skill, to boot. This is your chance to make White House history and have your art featured in their first-ever maker challenge.

The model should be no larger than 3”x 3” and reflect the magic and wonder of the holidays, so think ornaments that represent winter sports, toys, activities, symbols, and anything that inspires you during the festive winter season. Want to incorporate a little twinkle to your designs as well? Design a piece that fits or clips onto a string of lights!

To qualify, you must be a U.S. resident and create an Instructable for your ornament — and be sure to include the .stl file.