Archive for the accrc Category

Update on the ROMs

| April 25th, 2008

Atari and Coleco Eproms

Tomorrow they will be dumped. Tomorrow night, we should know. We’ll probably need some help analyzing the data, but I’ll post it all here. I can’t say that I will get it all posted by tomorrow night, as I have a dinner engagement at Tommy’s Joynt. But after that, the data that is recovered will come here.

On Tuesday evening, I went to the ACCRC because I had seen a Colecovision there a few weeks back. It was there, but it only had a 2-wire TV connector RF converter. Can’t just plug in the seemingly RCA jack that comes out the back of old game consoles, because it carries sound and video on one plug. You need that silver box with a switch in it. Usually, that box has a coax plug. None of the three I found at the ACCRC did.

So we had to hook it up to a 1960’s era TV. We plug in Venture, which was lying around in the piles of junk there, and nothing happens. Coleco’s dead. Probably the power supply. TV worked fine, though. Got kinda red inside… like, glowing tubes red. Took 1 minute to warm up enough to work. Wire console in the back was loose and I had to pull it up from behind the bezzel and hold it in place while I screwed down the two-wire connectors. It was black and white.
It worked.
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Anyway, we ended the night knowing NOTHING more than we started.

So, tomorrow, we know. Sunday, I’d like to go to Laney and look for a Colecovision. I know that hitting the flea market is kinda a solo affair– don’t wanna fight over who saw something first. But perhaps, as a gesture of good faith, we can have a collectors armistice this Sunday. Maybe us local Oakland / San Francisco / East Bay could all meet up somewhere on Sunday morning and hit Laney as one swarm?

Re-Make 2008 Photos

| April 11th, 2008

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Re-Make took place a week or so ago, and we have photos! These are special photos. They come from the past!

For some reason, James and Ilma have always stock piled the old Sony Mavica cameras. They use floppy disks as a storage medium, and since the ACCRC kind of began becoming really big when it started recycling those disks. They had a big machine that stripped them and labeled them and formatted them. Big thing.

Anyway, they have a bunch of these old things. We put them out with fresh batteries and a ton of floppies, and those at Re-Make took pictures. Here, then, are a few of those. The rest are on Flickr.

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Columbus and Johnny Cash

| April 4th, 2008

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This is Columbus. He works at the ACCRC, and is one of the more competent and charismatic fellows that have come through the place. Yesterday, while working from the MCRC, Columbus and Steve drove up from the ACCRC to do a pick up. We all had lunch together, and Leslie put on one of the newest albums donated to the MCRC: Johnny Cash Live at San Quentin.

Suddenly, Columbus dropped a bomb on us: He was at that show. Well, he wasn’t allowed out to see the show: it was piped into his cell. Only the honor groups of well behaved prisoners was allowed to actually attend the show. But Columbus was still there, at San Quentin, in his cell when the show occured. Certainly was nice of the warden to pipe the show through to him.

I think Steve was a little jealous of our amazement at Columbus’ admission. Steve was at San Quentin too. But Steve was there when Metallica filmed a video there.

The both of them say that San Quentin prison is now more like a candycane sugarpop fairy tale land than the psychotic death sentence of a lock-up it was in the 70’s and 80’s.

Re-Make This Weekend

| March 27th, 2008

The ACCRC is having its second annual Re-Make event this weekend. On Saturday, it’s “Bring us your crap” day from 10 AM to 5 PM. Bring us your old projects and junk that you just don’t have the time to fix. Then, on Sunday, we’ll be opening the door to a bunch of preselected Makers and letting them rebuilt, remake, and reuse all this stuff, as well as some other junk we’ve got lying around. Should be a real hoot!

ACCRC Installfest Video

| March 12th, 2008

 

Whipped up the ACCRC Installfest video just now. Music by Prefuse 73. Video by me.

ACCRC Silliness Video 8

| January 20th, 2008

 In which James shows off Scott’s newest creation.

The Albany Bulb

| August 20th, 2007

Ever been to the Albany Bulb? It used to be the landfill for, I believe, El Cerito et al. Now, it’s a mishmash of plants growing out of crushed highway pieces and jutting pieces of rebar. It’s also a great place to take pictures of collaborative art. I have a sinking suspicion that the sophisticated hippy hobo tends to camp out here, too.
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As an aside: Observe the glory that is the Multi-meter Fresco!
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James Gets Voiced

| June 29th, 2007

As if James Burgett needed to find his voice… He was featured on Voice of America, the government funded international radio station that’s broadcast in a number of languages, I believe. Congrats, James.

Tales of Maker Faire

| May 21st, 2007

There were some amazing people at Maker Faire. I tend to associate their respective talents with their willingness to dig through piles looking for gems they can use in their projects, so I am certainly biased in some ways. But the folks that did show up and were mesmerized by the stuff really made the whole event worth while. Of course, the ACCRC got plenty of PR from all those happy stuff diggers…

Electron Microscope

This lady and man took the electron microscope we had on hand. She said she was going to use it to cut chips in her garage. So happy someone took it to put it to good use!

Digging Microscope

The actual stripping of the thing took a lot of work. Not sure why they took off the springs before moving it, but they really knew what they were doing here, so we got out of their way. We tend to default to listening to people who are familiar with whatever it is a machine does, because we usually have no clue ourselves. You wouldn’t believe the amazing things that show up on a daily basis, and we are never able to identify it all. A lot of the stuff we brought to day one of Maker Faire came from a bio lab, hence the microscope. Most of the bio equipment was savaged for its controller cards and motors.

Leslie digs

The piles dwindled as the day went on, though we never ran out of junk for people to fish through. Leslie was stalwart in his ability to stay put and keep people cordial in the wire pit. Of course, the previous day his time was taken up with tattooing James’ neck. Later in the day, he did get to ride the scooter around for fun. Leslie is the fellow who did all the artwork at our booth, including the art for the T-shirts and the Goatse ad in the Onion. He also did the terrific background painting of Silicon Death Valley.

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This lady here, talking to Leslie, was furiously pulling SCSI cables from out piles of junk. When I went over to ask her what she was going to do with all of this ancient, thick cables, she smiled and pointed to her lapel. In the larger version of this picture, you can see that she’s got a dragonfly broach on her shirt. She makes these, she said, by pulling the mesh shielding out of the SCSI cables, and then coloring it in with Sharpies. Truly a brilliant idea for reuse, and one that we all thought was highly unique. Thus, we gave her a bag and helped her gather as many SCSI cables as we could untangle.

Rolling track

The best spot at the show, however, had to be the play room. The things people did and made in there were breath taking. It’s rare that an event in the open air actually fosters creativity. These types of conferences and expos are rarely about actually building and doing, they’re more often about listening to people talk, then watching as a small subset of those in attendance attempt to do some sort of timed stunt, like coding a game in 24 hours, or some such triviality. My favorite sight in the play room was actually a very crude and simple little ramp that this kid made. He couldn’t have been more than 5 years old, and he was having a ball rolling a wooden dowel down this foam ramp, all the while unknowingly learning very important lessons about physics. Of course, 80% of the stuff used in the play room came from the ACCRC.

Stuff diggers

Second, here are some pictures from Maker Faire’s second day.

Dig in 3 A savage torrent of cables and switches attacked and subdued poor Jamie. She showed up at Re-Make and built a phone-based microphon-stereo-bike mash up. I’ll cut the video into coherency some day.

 

Crafting a braided thingie!

On the second day, the ACCRC brought down a big gaylord of foam. This fellow constructed some sort of woven squid-like entity from it. Lots of it was used along with wooden cutouts from used models to build towers of sorts. All manner of interesting things were created in the play room, like the heli-pad below, and the fight scene on the left. Not sure where those little plastic figures came from originally, but I’m glad we brought them to donate for the play room!

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Helo pad

Motherboard of war and peace

They meet V met an alien!

DSCN4502.JPG They had their photos taken for posterity.

They Dance And then… THEY DANCED!

The end of the day, Sunday came quickly, and everyone packed up their stuff and went home. Except for us, Cyclecide, Combots, Mousetrap, and the lovely Neverwas Haul. SRL took a while to unload too, but that was probably due to having to fill out paperwork on the fire that caught during their show.

Jamie n' ZackFortunately, lots of people came by to help us clean up and throw everything back into gaylords. The Play Room folks did a great job cleaning up their end of the bargain too, and we didn’t have to work too terribly hard to get everything ready. Instead, we had to wait on our trucks being emptied back at home base so we could make second trips. Meanwhile, Microsoft parked it’s 18-wheeler right in the way of everyone else…

And thus, in true ACCRC fashion, we adapted. Instead of sitting around and bitching, we took advantage of the best toy we brought. An electric scooter James, Alan, and Dave had whipped up in 20 minutes, Friday night before Maker Faire. They intentionally geared it low and slow so no one would be killed by riding it through the crowds of Makers.

The scooter!

So, this little wagon that did all of 5 MPH was my steed during the show. I made a lot of friends riding it slowly through the expo halls. We charged it all night, and the damn thing never once ran out of juice, even though it was running almost constantly for 8 hours. Probably even longer.

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The secret to it’s ease of construction? Speaker wire, metal slot connectors, and a complete lack of anything between the batteries and the motor. Not sure where the motor came from, but the batteries were savaged from uninterrupted power supplies, like you use on a computer, of course. Plug in the two ends of the battery, and it goes forward. Swap the two leads back and forth, it goes in reverse.

We tooled around the entire San Mateo fairgrounds until the truck returned. It was a hoot! Anyway, the rest of our photos are in a Leslie ScootsFlickr set, so go have a look!V Scoots

Jennifer Scootin'