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安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- Make: Community - Make: Community
The post Candlelit Cathedral Dress appeared first on Make: DIY Projects and Ideas for Makers FAB25: The Global FabLab Gathering Comes to Central Europe Mark your calendars for July 4–11, 2025, as the global FabLab community meets in Brno and Prague for FAB25
- Welcome - Make: Community
Make: is a global platform that allows Makers come together to learn, share, make, and collaborate The launch of Make: magazine in 2005, followed by Maker Faire in 2006, jumpstarted a worldwide Maker Movement which is transforming innovation, culture, and education
- Why did Maker Faire start? And, what is the Maker Movement?
The launch of Maker Faire in the Bay Area in 2006 demonstrated the popularity of making and interest among legions of aspiring Makers to participate in hands-on activities and learn new skills at the event Maker Faire is primarily designed to be forward-looking, showcasing Makers who are exploring new forms and new technologies
- Maker Camp on Make: Community
Maker Camp registration on Make: Community is free We provide you with resources (project ideas step-by-step instructions, community connection) to summer camps and young Makers interested in DIY, making, creating, crafting, hacking, tinkering, and learning
- Make: Community - Maker Movement
Dougherty also organized the first maker event, Maker Faire in 2006, an event that showcased the creativity of makers and brought the community together on a global scale Before Make: and Maker Faire, creatives and academics were labeled by their specific trade—engineers, crafters, programmers, artists, etc
- Make: cast - Make: Community
Jim talks honestly about the challenges of growing a makerspace With 700 members and many programs for young makers in the community, NoVA Labs has a bold vision of what a makerspace can be and Jim is determined to realize that vision in his community NoVA Labs is thriving with plans to host a Maker Faire against next spring Read Article
- Makers in Arms
I told stories of makers and their projects and two of them were French makers — Benjamin Cabé who told us about developing an AI nose to detect different smells, and Gael Langevin who created the open-source InMoov humanoid robot and how he was working to add facial expressions to his robot, which was featured in the current issue of Make:
- Lets Make Toolkit - Make: Community
Make: kickstarted the maker movement, cultivating millions of makers and hundreds of thousands of prototypes and products—like Arduino, Raspberry Pi, MakerBot, and so many more They’ve also inspired thousands of makerspaces and Maker Faires in hundreds of countries, creating a ripple effect of innovation worldwide
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