"Hacker spaces" are giving geek tinkerers a place to gather, create and collaborate

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Uploaded by on Apr 9, 2009

http://www.thetakeaway.org/
Produced by Jennifer Hsu for The Takeaway

The promise of open source can be found in a dull commercial building in downtown Brooklyn. The fruits of this approach -- where people share ideas for others to build on -- are coming out of the laser cutter buzzing away in the corner. Or in the disassembled parts of the robot that automatically served drinks. Or the 3D printer that can build other 3D printers.

The 5th floor office of NYC Resistor is a hacker space, one of scores popping up around the country and hundreds emerging around the world. In Germany, the government subsidizes them. In the U.S., a few people who like to tinker with electronics pool money for a place that lets them keep the circuit boards and soldering irons out of their small apartments. They're creating devices that let you turn off any TV in range of a remote control. They're building giant antennae for ham radio enthusiasts. And then there's the 3D printer.

A 3D printer is exactly what it sounds like. A plain old 2D printer prints letters. This spits out objects you can hold in your hand. Toys, door knobs, jewelry. A couple of these guys have quit their day jobs so they can sell 3D printer kits to people interested in building their own. These people are building objects that build other objects.

In a way, this hacker space is like the MIT media lab without the academic reputation. It draws the best talent in computer engineering and the innovation that emerges in highly valuable. But NYC Resistor - or any other hacker space - does not have the institutional burdens of academia or the profit demands of a company. The main goal is to tinker. Take in people's old ipods and make new machines out of them. Rip out the resistors of discarded monitors and make a box that plays high or low-pitched music based on the weather of the city you select. Point the powerful antenna in the right direciton and talk to ham radio users on the other side of the planet. Bounce the signals off the International space station and if you're lucky, you may get a response from the astronauts on board.

Most of the members of this hacker space have important day jobs. One works for the New York Times in the department charged with designing a newspaper that will survive the 21st century. Another works for a university that might train the next engineers for Google. But all the members pool their skills to teach classes to anyone that wants them Recently a team of Google employees signed up for a lesson.

The amazing part of all this: nobody gets paid. This is just for fun. The social part is paramount, the founders say. They don't even allow members to nominate exes as other members. So no ex-girlfriends, ex-boyfriends, ex-roommates, ex-colleagues. Everyone's got to get along or it just doesn't work. And in case you're wondering, it's not just a bunch of pimply guys. Almost half the members or women and most of the guys have a fashion sense as keen as their soldering skills.

NYC Resistor, and the other hacker spaces around the country, might point to a new model for innovation. One where the best ideas come from the volunteers that play with them. Where the next inventions come from a group of technology enthusiasts just having fun.

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Top Comments

  • man...geeks coulld probly rule theworld if they all workd togather

  • I like the part when the guy with the iPod's is like, "I never had an iPod before... but now I have a lot."

    XD

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All Comments (233)

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  • hihÌ_I_fÈÈl_sÔ_lóNèlY_tÔÐâÿ

  • @pete275

    That what it does- That's ALL it does,, you can't stop it!!

  • 1:46 they use blender for the 3d models :P

  • Hmm... this inspires me, I must build something...

  • that's real kool

  • God, I love geeks XD

  • can the machine make other machines that make machine?

  • The Hacker/Maker space in Seattle is Metrix: Create Space. They have a lazer cutter, a couple of big plotters, several 3D printers. Of course, the nice thing about having a lazer cutter and a 3D printer is that you can then make more 2d printers, which is why they have more than one.  I was just there yesterday for a great workshop they did on programming Arduino micro-controllers.

  • Two words for you, metroid - satellite tv. (which you can get, interestingly enough, even if your dish is pointed at a tree. I suppose that's because the tree is cylindrical.) The only trick is that the ISS moves relative to the earth whereas most tv satellites don't. Or they don't move appreciably.

  • lol @ hipsters who probably have degrees in history and english masquerading as technical people

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