<![CDATA[Gizmodo: phil torrone]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: phil torrone]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/philtorrone http://gizmodo.com/tag/philtorrone <![CDATA[Hands-On Gifts for Hackers, Makers and the DIY Obsessed]]> Hi there, I'm Phil. I live in an electronics factory, and regularly need to pluck microcontrollers out of my feet when walking around barefoot. I thought I could bring some of that joy to you in a gift guide.

It's going to be a little different than just the usual crap you can buy—it's a guide that can start you on an amazing journey of building electronics, learning new skills. If you're really motivated, you just might invent something new.

Let's get started! The question I get asked the most is "where to start"—lots of people see all the DIY projects here on Gizmodo and just don't know where to begin. I've put together some favorite tools, resources and beginner electronics kits that will get you going and give you something fun to show your friends. You don't need to buy many things either, since many of the kits and gadgets are "open source"—you can buy the parts, etch a circuit board, "breadboard" it or in some cases just build parts of them with what you may have at home by cannibalizing a junk drawer of fail-gadgets.

BTW, if you hate the gallery format as much as the Grinch hated Christmas, click here.

The Tools

Starting out on your electronics adventure? Want to wield the mighty soldering iron? Tired of saying "I'd totally get into electronics if I only knew what tools to get..."? Working with substandard equipment is a terrible way to learn electronics: A lot of frustration with too little success. The right tool set will keep you progressing without the stressing. This toolbox contains carefully selected hand tools that will last you for many many years. Keep in mind that you don't need to buy this tool pack—just look it over (itemized on the product page). Consider it a list of good things to have to get started. You may even have some of these tool collecting dust in the garage already! $100 [Ladyada's Electronics Toolkit]

Make & Build Stuff

Now that you've got the tools, what's next? Microcontrollers! These are basically cheap, tiny computers that you can run simple programs on, control motors and make stuff happen based on sensor data.

For the longest time BASIC Stamp/PIC was the dominant chip that hobbyists used, and still to this day PICs are very popular. However, over the last few years an open-source project from Italy called "Arduino"—named after the Italian king Arduino of Ivrea, who ruled from 1002 to 1015, of course!—it has captured the hearts and minds of many beginners. No one knows why it's so popular (over 100k units!) but I'd say it's because the software to program them runs on Mac, PC and Linux, there's a huge community of artists who make amazing things and share them, and it's pretty inexpensive. And since it's 100% open source, you can make your own versions, improve on them and sell them if you wanted to.

What do the following projects all have in common? Google Street View on a hacked stationary bike, electronic wallpaper, secret-knock door opener, Ghostbusters proton packs, Barbots, skateboard etch-a-sketch and a Twitter toilet that tweets your poo... They're all made with Arduino!

Make & Build Stuff

You don't need to buy an Arduino, you can "make" one using a breadboard and a lot of parts—but let's say you want to dive in and pick up an Arduino with enough projects to teach you how things work, and help you explore microcontroller basics. Covers LEDs, transistors, motors, integrated circuits, pushbuttons, variable resistors, photo resistors, temperature sensors & relays. I suggest the Arduino ARDX experimentation pack for $85. If that breaks the bank, choose from less expensive packs: a $65 starter pack, a $50 budget pack or just a straight-up $30 Arduino.

If you can scrounge up the parts on your own you can always download and print up the free booklet which includes all the lessons. If you're the book-learnin' type, there's a great little one called Getting Started With Arduino, $13, written by Massimo Banzi, co-founder of the Arduino Project.

Make & Build Stuff

The Arduino is great and there are a lot of "shields" to expand its functionality (music, GPS, internet), but what if you want to get your hands dirty and make something more complicated? Here are three of my favorite beginner electronics kits to get you started—as always, they are open source so you could make these on your own too.

The first lets you juice up all the gadgets—MP3 player, camera, cell phone, etc.—that you plug into a USB port to charge. The Minty Boost is small and simple but very powerful. If you have a new or old phone that always runs down, make one of these to get a lot of extra talk time. Be sure to check the project page for the latest compatibility notes for many devices. $20 [Minty Boost kit]

Make & Build Stuff

Relive the fun of CES 2008 everyday with TV-B-Gone. People are still polarized about the whole CES thing. Everyone was complaining that CES sucked because it was just about "giant TVs" and when someone turned them off for a few seconds the intarwebs world freaked out. I don't have any opinion on it, other than that CES should be more exciting than a TV-turn-off freak out. That said, the TV-B-Gone is a wonderful device to learn the ins-and-outs of IR signaling, and it's fun to turn off TVs in store windows that are closed at night to save power. (That's what I like to do.) The new Universal TV-B-Gone kit is an ultra-high-power version of the TV-B-Gone (assembled), able to reach 150 feet and can be used anywhere in the world. Plus, you make it yourself. $20 [TV-B-Gone (kit or assembled)]

Make & Build Stuff

Spell words in the air with your bicycle wheels using SpokePOV, an easy-to-make electronic kit toy. The project includes a free schematic design and open software for uploading and editing stored bitmap images. Perfect for those late-night Critical Mass rides or your Burning Man transport. $100 for triple; $38 for one [SpokePOV]

Hackable Electronics and 3D Printing

Next up, I put together some of my favorite "gadgets" that aren't necessarily kits but are hackable. Many companies are inviting their customers to hack and mod their devices, the folks are the pioneers!

The Chumby does so many things it's hard to actually tell someone what it is. I usually say it's an internet alarm clock that runs widgets. Most people seem to get that, or they'll get curious enough to check out the site. The latest version, the cool retro-looking Chumby One is out. The product is open source, so you can hack it, mod it, get the source and schematics and best of all make widgets for it. (Chumby trivia: The engineer behind it, Bunnie Huang, is one of the best engineers in the world. If you're old school, you'll remember him as the first person to hack the original Xbox, and as author of Hacking the Xbox: An Introduction to Reverse Engineering.) $99 [Chumby; Review]

Hackable Electronics and 3D Printing

Bug is the Lego of computers. Make a GPS camera MP3 player? You can! It's a modular, open-source system for building whatever comes to mind, by plugging little modules into each other till you get the desired functionality. If you want to program them, you need to know Java, but there are also a lot of apps you can just download. BUGbase core $450; assorted modules from $70; monster kit $750 [Bug Labs]

Hackable Electronics and 3D Printing

MakerBot is a new entry in the world of 3D printing. Based on the open-source RepRap project, Brooklyn-based MakerBot is becoming the default install for any self-respecting hacker space. (Well, that and a laser cutter.) The MakerBot can print 3D objects you make or download—Thingiverse is a great source. The coolest thing I've seen lately is a print out of Thom Yorke's head. $700 [MakerBot]

My Fantasy Gadget

The Giz gang asked me to name a "dream gadget," and of course for me it's something that makes things: A "pick-and-place" machine, namely the MDC 7722fv from Japan. You could use it to make iPhones in your living room if you really wanted to. I have one now, so at least for me, the fantasy has became a reality. I'm currently making accelerometers and Drawdios (musical pencils) but next year expect to see an open-source watch and who knows? Maybe you'll see me selling cloned iPhones on Canal Street in NYC, next to the counterfeit DVD and purse dudes. Over $30,000 [MDC; US distributor]

Got questions or comments? Post 'em up below. I'll try to answer all of them that I can!

Phil Torrone is the senior editor at MAKE magazine and creative director for Adafruit Industries, an open source hardware manufacturer in NYC. In the interest of disclosure, please note that many of the products you see above are sold though Adafruit and Make, but it just so happens, the source for the best info is also the source for many of the goods.

All Giz Wants is our annual round-up of favorite gift ideas, including amazing attainable objects and a few far-out fantasies. We'll be popping guides catered to different interests several times per day for the next week, so keep checking back.

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<![CDATA[Citizen Engineer Releases a Comic All About SIM Hacking (and Tosses in a SIM Reader for Good Measure)]]> Phil Torrone and Limor Freid of Adafruit Industries have a video project called Citizen Engineer, where they aim to educate and entertain when it comes to various aspects of open source hacking. Now they've released a comic to go with it.

The inaugural book essentially mimics the video, but also happens to come complete with functioning QR code trickery and a SIM reader that you can use for fun (maybe profit?). The set costs $35 (purchasable here), but if you like, you can also print it out yourself. The downside is that you might not get the same, high quality look and you definitely won't get a SIM reader. But then again you save $35. [Citizen Engineer]

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<![CDATA[Let's Get Busy: Songs to Listen to While Making Things]]> Phil Torrone, senior editor of MAKE and creative director for DIY site Adafruit, is a DIY guru and all-around good guy. So we had him give us good songs to listen to while building stuff.

He gave us a list of tunes chock full of productive, creative goodness. We posted the songlist and a video to get you started, but you can see the rest of the vids with commentary over on the Adafruit blog. (Photo courtesy of HSmade)


• Peter, Paul and Mary - "If I Had a Hammer"
• Daft Punk - "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger"
• Kraftwerk - "Pocket Calculator"
• John Prine - "Grandpa Was a Carpenter"
• Madness - "Our House"
• Elton John - "Electricity"
• Kraftwerk - "The Robots"
• Starship - "We Built This City"
• Rufus Wainwright - "The Maker Makes"
• Radiohead - "House of Cards"
• ZZ Top - "Woke Up With Wood"


Listening Test: It's music tech week at Gizmodo.

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<![CDATA[Tweet-a-Watt, Because It's OK To Brag About Energy Efficiency]]> Phil at Make has developed a mod for the Kill-A-Watt power meter: Tweet-a-Watt transmits your daily power usage to Twitter via PC, so friends and strangers will know you're a smug, super-green SOB.

The Kill-A-Watt is already one of my favorite toys, capable of telling me just how much of a juice hog the Pioneer first-gen Kuro plasma is when compared to any LCD anywhere ever (about twice), or the PS3 is when compared to a standard Blu-ray player (10X or more).

What our buddy Phil Torrone and Limor Fried of Adafruit have done as an entry in Core77's Greener Gadgets competition is made it useful as a tracker, or maybe a bragger.

When it gets a reading of your daily KWH usage, it blasts it via Xbee wireless transmitter to a PC "or internet-connected microcontroller, like an Arduino." (I did mention Phil Torrone came up with this, didn't I?) From there, it's just an easy hop from your Twitter account.

Why tweet your damn KWH? Here's what Phil says:

We feel there is a social imperative and joy in publishing one's own daily KWH - by sharing these numbers on a service like Twitter users can compete for the lowest numbers and also see how they're doing compared to their friends and followers.

So like, "Na na na-na na—my carbon output makes your carbon output look like a Chinese toy factory's carbon output!" [Make via CrunchGear]

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<![CDATA[At Gizmodo Gallery: Free DIY Laser Etching]]>

I've always been fascinated with the idea of laser etching all my tech gear, and it looks like I would finally be able to do it at the Gizmodo Gallery. Thanks to Make's Phil Torrone and his laser machine, anyone walking in the Gizmodo Gallery would be able to tattoo their metal gadgets with Phil's laser, absolutely free of charge. (He'll be there on the first day we're open, December 4th.) We will have some illustrations available for people to choose from but, if you follow these instructions closely, you would be able to bring your own drawings to use them with the laser.

• First, your illustration must be a vector file. Not a bitmap. If you are not sure what this means, don't bring it. The machine can only etch vector-based files.
• Save your vector illustration in Adobe Illustrator format (again, no bitmaps saved inside. Just vector art).
• Make sure your illustration is adjusted to your hardware physical features. If you are bringing a MacBook, you can use the templates here.

[Thanks to Phil Torrone for the laser, to REED ANNEX and thanks to our benefactor gizmine.com]

Gizmodo Gallery
Reed Annex
151 Orchard Street
New York, NY 10002

Gizmodo Gallery Reader Meetup
The reader meetup takes place across the street from the Gallery, at a place called The Annex (not to be confused with REED ANNEX where the gallery is hosted.) The address is 152 Orchard Street and we'll be there at 9 PM SHARP on Friday December 5th.

Gallery Dates:
December 4th-7th

Times:
12/4 Thursday
12-8

12/5 Friday
12-8

12/6 Saturday
11-8

12/7 Sunday
11-4

[Read more about our Gizmodo Gallery here and see what else we'll be playing with at the event.]

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<![CDATA[Maker Faire Hits Bay Area May 3 and 4]]> Maker Faire is in town again, hitting up the bay area with their ridiculously dangerous projects and robots and flaming robot projects this May 3 and 4. If you're in town, you should stop by and see what the crazy doctor Phil Torrone has cooking for you. At the very least, you can stop by and say hi to the Giz folks that are going to be down there. Maybe even buy them some soda. Trying to take pictures of stuff next open flames and wildly careening robots is thirsty work. [Maker Faire]

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<![CDATA[Giz and Justin.tv at Maker's Faire Now]]> Justin.tv is a Giz fan, and I'm a Justin fan, so we're going to cover Maker's Faire and visit Phil Torrone together. Justin stream after the jump, Giz posts on the home page.

UDPATE: We're all done. Here are our photos from the event.

Justin's noggin cam Live [Justin.tv]

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<![CDATA[Laser Etched Sushi]]> Phil Torrone thinks etching laptops is already old news. We asked him to grab a bite to eat and he emailed us back with these photos of his laser etched dinner, some dried seaweed. I'll take some of that. Maybe a little laser seared tuna, too? And could you guys remove this hairy mole on my back, please? Sweet, thanks.

Then, there's an etched burrito...

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Phil at Make Blog [Make]

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