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Showing episodes and shows of
Dale Dougherty
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Make:cast
A Maker's Life - a generational perspective
In this episode of Make:cast, Dale Dougherty from Make Magazine chats with Marilyn Nash and Amber Hudson, authors of 'A Maker's Life'. Both of them are former teachers - Marilyn is retired and Ambers works at 1st Makerspace in Indiana. They discuss the impact their book has had on readers, igniting meaningful conversations about the maker mindset among people of all ages. Amber shares the story of how she and Marilyn met and collaborated on the book, which serves as both a personal narrative of Marilyn's life as a maker and a reflective guide for developing makerspaces. They...
2025-06-11
41 min
Make:cast
Making Electronic Music with Kirk Pearson
In this episode of Make:cast, host Dale Dougherty speaks with Kirk Pearson, author of 'Electronic Music from Scratch,' and Kevin Toyama, the book's editor. Kirk is a musical experimenter and he encourages others to do the same. Kirk shares his journey from a traditional music background to creating electronic music and building custom instruments. He discusses his workshops, where participants learn to build synthesizers and other electronic instruments. Specific topics include circuit bending, synthesizer design, and the use of capacitors and potentiometers in creating electronic sounds. The conversation also touches on the challenges of translating workshop experiences i...
2025-04-24
45 min
Make:cast
The Creative Potential For AI in Education
In this episode of Make:cast, Dale Dougherty is joined by Ken Kahn, author of 'The Learner's Apprentice: AI and the Amplification of Human Creativity,' and Sylvia Martinez, co-author of 'Invent to Learn.' Ken discusses his experience in AI from his high school days to MIT's AI Lab and his journey into integrating AI into children's programming tools. Sylvia sheds light on the importance of empowering children with modern tools and technology. The discussion centers on creative uses of AI in education, including creating web apps and historical dialogues using chatbots, personalized learning, and the impact of...
2025-03-20
29 min
Make:cast
Make: Turns Twenty and We're Still Going
Dale Dougherty discusses the launch and evolution of Make: Magazine, a DIY technology publication, since its inception in February 2005. The conversation includes insights from original team members Mark Frauenfelder, Dave Albertson, Shawn Connolly, and Paul Spinrad, as well as current editor-in-chief Keith Hammond. The magazine, launched amidst a declining print industry, aimed to share project instructions and inspire readers to engage in DIY activities. The first issue showcased a kite aerial photography project by Cris Benton, exemplifying ingenious solutions like using popsicle sticks and a Silly Putty Viscous Timer. They reminisced about early decision-making, the importance of design, challenges in...
2025-02-15
49 min
Make:cast
I'm 3D Printing Chocolate: A Conversation with Ellie Weinstein of Cocoa Press
In this episode of Make:Cast, Dale Dougherty interviews Ellie Weinstein, founder and CEO of Cocoa Press, a company that manufactures 3D printers that print chocolate. Ellie discusses her 10-year journey from a high school project to launching the second model of her Cocoa Press printer. The discussion highlights her background in mechanical engineering, her experience with 3D printing, and the challenges of creating a unique product that combines technology and confectionery. Ellie also shares her experiences at Maker Faire, the difficulties of manufacturing in the US vs. China, and the significant milestones in developing and marketing her chocolate 3...
2024-12-21
40 min
Make:cast
Upskilling with Steph Piper
In this episode of MakeCast, Dale Dougherty interviews Steph Piper, a creative technologist from Queensland, Australia. They discuss her Maker Queen website, her Skill Trees project, and her new book, Skill Seeker Maker Edition. Steph shares insights into her role at a university library makerspace, her electronics kits for kids, and her GlowStitchLEDs project. The conversation also covers the development and application of skill trees as a tool for self-directed learning and maker engagement, as well as the importance of community in makerspaces.00:00 Introduction to Steph Piper and Skill Trees01:32 Steph Piper's Journey and Maker Queen
2024-11-22
24 min
Event Explorer
Maker Faire - Dale Dougherty
New Episode Alert! Join Event Explorer as we explore the world of creativity and hands-on innovation with Dale Dougherty, founder of the global Maker movement. In this episode, Dale shares how #MakerFaires around the world—from Tokyo to Rome—bring communities together through interactive projects, sparking curiosity and collaboration across generations. Learn how these events inspire the next wave of creators and provide the tools and connections to turn ideas into reality. Listen now on Event Explorer for an inspiring conversation that highlights the power of hands-on learning and creativity. #EventExplorer #MakerMovement #DaleDougherty #MakeMagazine #MakerFaire #Crea...
2024-11-11
33 min
Make:cast
Moon Makers of Mexico
Dale Dougherty interviews Camila and Diego Luna of Moonmakers at the Fab 24 conference in Puebla, Mexico. Moonmakers is an educational non-profit focused on promoting science, technology, STEAM education, and the maker movement. They share their journey from starting with robotics and participating in international competitions, to creating content and resources for teachers and students. They highlight the importance of peer-to-peer learning and the challenges faced by the maker community in Mexico. They also discuss their involvement in the Fab 24 conference, showcasing workshops and the importance of breaking language barriers in STEAM education.https://make.co/make-cast/
2024-09-13
22 min
Make:cast
Tinkerer, Engineer, Mr. Mom, Maker, Teacher
A conversation between Dale Dougherty, the founder of Make Magazine and Maker Faire, and Brian Wagner, an educator, coder, and maker. Brian Wagner talks about his life as a maker from his first encounter with computers to his current career in teaching and creating a how-to-code video course. They discuss his early fascination with computers, transitioning into engineering and teaching, his experiences in founding a hackerspace, and his efforts in introducing youngsters to coding. Brian emphasizes the importance of a growth mindset and talks about the connection between making and coding, indicating both to be essential skills. He also s...
2023-11-01
34 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Ken Berman's Industrial Whimsy
Sebastopol artist Ken Berman’s painting, “Temporary Restraining Order,” was selected for a new juried Open ‘23 show at SF's de Young Museum, which is open now and runs through the January 7th. Berman is a bit of an outlier among Sonoma County artists; he doesn’t do landscapes or seascapes. Instead, as a young man growing up in Pennsvylvania and New Jersey, Berman was inspired by steel mills and railroads as well as Rube Goldberg and Salvador Dali to look at the surface of the world around us and see inside it to find something in the complexity of its detail...
2023-10-04
17 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Steve Fowler on the Luther Burbank Experiment Farm
Press Fest is this Saturday at the Luther Burbank Experiment Farm from 10 to 2pm. You’ll be able to use an antique apple press or a more modern electric one to make delicious juice from local apples. This week, I had the opportunity to talk to Steve Fowler who was curator at the Luther Burbank Experiment Farm from 1989 until 2010.Fowler is the one person who knows as much about the farm’s past as well as its present as a historical museum and active farm. For this conversation, we sat in the cottage at a large table. I pr...
2023-09-15
13 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
The Local Art at Burning Man
Burning Man, the desert festival of radical inclusion, is also an amazing art festival by day and by night. My guests on this episode are two local art-makers, Deborah Colotti and Peter Loughran, who brought their own art to Burning Man this year. They returned home last week in good spirits after two weeks on the Playa. Both of them have been going to Burning Man for many years, and they are used to its harsh conditions and unpredictable weather. Moreover, they find the beauty in the whole experience - being there is part of the art of Burning...
2023-09-12
16 min
English Academic Vocabulary Booster
4568. 110 Academic Words Reference from "Dale Dougherty: We are makers | TED Talk"
This podcast is a commentary and does not contain any copyrighted material of the reference source. We strongly recommend accessing/buying the reference source at the same time. ■Reference Source https://www.ted.com/talks/dale_dougherty_we_are_makers ■Post on this topic (You can get FREE learning materials!) https://englist.me/110-academic-words-reference-from-dale-dougherty-we-are-makers-ted-talk/ ■Youtube Video https://youtu.be/gyMwxHix8zw (All Words) https://youtu.be/2Kl21VT8sMo (Advanced Words) https://youtu.be/SzzPHfKUvrg (Quick Look) ...
2023-09-07
1h 39
Cohere Podcast
The History and Future of the Maker Movement with Dale Dougherty
In this episode of the Cohere podcast, co-hosts Bill Johnston and Dr. Lauren Vargas welcome Dale Dougherty, the founder of Make: Magazine and Maker Faire, and a person who played a key and critical role in the launch of the Maker Movement. Dougherty shares his career journey and his belief that everyone is inherently a maker. The conversation takes a deep dive into the history and future of the Maker Movement, discussing the importance of community in both digital and real-life maker experiences. Dougherty also outlines plans for the return of the Bay Area Maker Faire, revealing a new location...
2023-08-31
43 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Gravensteins Galore! The Apple Fair at 50
Sebastopol Times is a reader-supported publication. Please consider becoming a paid subscriber today.Carmen Snyder is the executive director of Sonoma County Farm Trails and the producer of the Gravenstein Apple Fair at Ragle Park this weekend (August 12 & 13). In my conversation with Carmen, we talk about the Apple Fair at 50; it’s hardly news that the Gravenstein is still “the star of the show.” We talk about how the Fair has become a zero-waste event, how volunteers known as the Apple Corps play such a vital role, and the value of agritourism in connecting people to far...
2023-08-09
14 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Sara Gramm can't give up the kid part
Last spring, Sara Gramm was named the new superintendent of Sebastopol Union School District, which includes Park Side (TK-4th) and Brook Haven (5th-8th) schools. She succeeds Linda Irving, who had been in the role for ten years. Sara has been Assistant Superintendent since 2017. Sara grew up going to Sebastopol schools including Brook Haven and Analy. She student-taught at Park Side and then was hired by Sebastopol Union as a teacher at Pinecrest. She has been working as an educator in the District for over twenty years and is now its superintendent.Sebastopol...
2023-08-01
14 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Region. Reaches Three and Beyond
Region is celebrating its third birthday this month with a party from 2-4pm on Saturday July 22nd in their space at the Barlow. Region represents an innovative approach to wine tasting that promotes the best small, independent wineries in Sonoma County. They also now have three businesses: the shop in the Barlow, another space in San Luis Obispo and Sampl, a new wine-tasting product that can be shipped to those who can’t make it to wine country. Kerry Thedorf is a co-founder of Region and serves as the head of marketing, br...
2023-07-21
13 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Old Cat: Poet Raphael Block
Sebastopol poet Raphael Block talks about his latest book of poetry, The Dreams We Share and shares several of his poems, including one about an old cat that sought out his attention. Described as an eco-poet, Block is moved by the Earth to speak in his own wonderful voice about what he sees and experiences all around him. “When I go outside, I'm literally moved by the earth. Physically. Emotionally. I would say spiritually too.” He makes note of what attracts his attention. “Sometimes it grows into a poem,” he says.Transcript Raphael BlockDale...
2023-05-31
19 min
Make:cast
Michael Stone: Authentic Learning and Making
Dale Dougherty talks to Michael Stone of the Public Education Foundation of Hamilton County in southeast Tennessee. Michael is responsible to developing a network of 34 Fab Labs in K-12 schools with more to come next year. In this conversation, Michael talks about making as authentic learning, involving real problems and solutions, and which leads to authentic assessment. 00:00 Authentic Learning and Making02:09 Michael's Background03:54 Stumbling into Fab Labs05:46 From Master Teacher to Master Learner07:57 Coaching12:06 Authentic Assessment18:44 Expanding from one school to many20:21 Pioneers and Settlers26:37 Blending Personalized Fabrication and Personalized...
2023-05-24
28 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Mr. Fix It
Steve Griffith is a former elementary school teacher who moved to Forestville about 10 years ago. Wanting to do an event for the West County community, he proposed to the Russian River Rotary Club that they sponsor a Fix-it Fair at the El Molino campus in Forestville. They agreed and the Fair took place April 29.I talked to Steve before and after the event to learn more about how he organized the event developed as well as to talk about how we can and should repair more of what we own instead of just throwing it away. Steve...
2023-05-08
18 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Restarting the Arts after Covid
My conversation with Kristen Madsen, director of Creative Sonoma, explores how arts organizations are adapting to life after the never-say-goodbye pandemic as well as the ongoing assessment of the role of the arts and arts education in our community. It continues a discussion about challenges facing the Sebastopol Center for the Arts, which we featured in a previous article. The challenges facing our local arts institution are similar to those faced by organizations throughout the county and nation due in part to Covid but also because our relationship to art itself keeps changing.Highlights* “We li...
2023-04-17
20 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Alan Murakami's "The Uncle I Never Knew"
On Memorial Day for every year that Alan Murakami can remember, his family went down to the National Golden Gate Cemetery in San Bruno to lay flowers beside the grave of Peter Masuoka, his uncle. During Covid, Alan decided he had the time to write about his uncle and his Japanese-American family. Peter, who grew up in Sebastopol, died in France fighting for his country in the 442nd Battalion in World War II, all the while his family was held in an internment camp in Colorado. Alan’s grandfather was a first-generation Japanese-American, known as Is...
2023-03-25
25 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
What to do about Fentanyl?
Micah and Michelle Sawyer join me to talk about fentanyl, a drug that’s become more widely available illegally in Sonoma County and elsewhere across the country. The Sawyers lost their 22-year old son, Micah, Jr to a fentanyl overdose in 2019. Since then, they have been letting others know about how prevalent fentanyl is, how addictive and deadly it is and how having drug Narcan widely available can prevent fentanyl overdose deaths. Micah and Michelle were named Locals Who Make a Difference by the City of Sebastopol in October 2021. They were also recognized by the KP...
2023-02-24
18 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Small Circles of Folks
This episode, a conversation with David Mark-Raymond, covers a lot of ground. It’s about community service and the way that individuals get involved in service clubs like Rotary to do things locally and internationally. It’s about David’s personal story; he was once a teacher and then a realtor; he’s been a longtime member of Sunrise Rotary; and a few years ago, he was diagnosed with cancer and beat the odds, which led him to retire and focus even more on community service. It’s also about how a small circle of folks including David who...
2023-02-18
27 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Working with the homeless over and over
Note (January 17): After publishing this interview, I learned that Jennifer will be leaving WCCS to take a job working in senior housing. In the summer of 2021, those who lived in RVs parked on Morris Street near the Barlow had become a problem that the city had to deal with. The conditions were becoming hazardous for those who lived there, with debris accumulating on the street. One RV caught on fire. Reports of criminal activity increased as did complaints from merchants and citizens. The City Council agreed to fund an Outreach Coordinator through West County Community Se...
2023-01-15
30 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
When you raise your right hand, it's truly humbling
Stephen Zollman joins Dale Dougherty to talk about running for City Council, getting the most votes in the election and then being sworn on December 6th. He talks about his work as a public defender in San Francisco and as a family law lawyer in Sonoma County. His decision to run for office was motivated by a desire to see more diverse voices in elected office and also to be one of those who can represent more diverse voices. He credits his winning the election to having a strong team supporting him. He is proud of his DIY campaign...
2022-12-23
20 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
How Cloud Brought Us Music Festivals
Music promoter and event producer Cloud Moss produced the Sebastopol Celtic Festival for 16 years (1995-2011) and the Kate Wolf Music Festival for 24 years (1996-2021). In this interview, we talk about:* how Brad became Cloud in the 1970’s because he brought news to a couple who lived on top of a mountain in Mendocino.* his youth in the San Fernando Valley where he played sports and imagined that he would become a poetry professor.* his wandering through Europe after high school before moving to Boonville in Mendocino and then eventually attending Sonoma State....
2022-12-13
28 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Secular Bells
The Bell Clock is an art project by Jim Wheaton that sits, for now, in his backyard in downtown Sebastopol. Jim sought to create the same kind of feeling with sound that church bells create in town, but he wanted to hear bells playing secular music instead of sacred hymns. He wondered, though, would his art project run up against the town’s noise ordinance? In this episode, I talk to Jim about his project which makes a claim on public space for sound. He talks about the playlist that he has programmed for the Bell Clock an...
2022-12-02
09 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
What Does An Election This Close Tell Us?
In this conversation, we talk to a local political consultant, Dennis Rosatti, about the election results, which are still coming in. Dennis lives in Sebastopol but did not work for any of the City Council or School Board candidates in Sebastopol in this year’s elections. He shares his observations on the City Council election, addressing what seemed to matter in a close race and touching on voter turnout, the role of under voting (voting for less than three candidates) or bullet-voting, the value of endorsements as well as door-to-door canvasing. We started recording this session at 1:30pm...
2022-11-19
22 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Woodworker & parent Lewis Buchner on running for WSCUHSD
Lewis Buchner is running in an uncontested race for trustee from the Fifth District of the West County Union High School District. The Fifth District represents the downtown area of Sebastopol. Originally from New Jersey, Lewis has lived in San Francisco and the East Bay but moved to Sebastopol about eight years ago to live in the residence his parents had owned in Sebastopol. He is a woodworker and with his wife, Amy, run a small design-build shop called Myra Studio in town. He has a fourteen year old daughter who is an Analy freshman. ...
2022-11-05
14 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Straight Talk with Neysa Hinton
The Vice Mayor of the Sebastopol City Council, Neysa Hinton, speaks her mind even if it might not be completely politic to do so. She knows her own voice and it is a strong one. A working mother, who has worked in radio and now in an assisted living facility, she has juggled a career and her duties as an elected official.Neysa talks about growing up in Sebastopol but also in Jerome, Idaho where she got started in working in radio. She moved back to Sonoma County and continued to work in radio here and in...
2022-10-20
34 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Paul Fritz on Sebastopol's 3 Covid-era Parklets
Paul Fritz is an architect in Sebastopol and a member of the CORE Project. He has been an advocate for parklets as a way for people to reoccupy the public spaces devoted to cars. During Covid, parklets became an answer to indoor use restrictions and cities everywhere were approving them. Paul did a lot of the leg work to obtain permits to bring parklets to Sebastopol over two years ago. All three of Sebastopol’s parklets require a temporary permit from Caltrans, who owns the right-of-way on these major roadways. Caltrans extended those permits but decided earlier in...
2022-10-01
28 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
John Namkung and Lone Pine Ukrainian Family Aid
Since John Namkung retired as an administrator of special education services in Sonoma County, he’s been involved in several humanitarian missions abroad. Earlier this year, John went to Poland, weeks after the Russian invasion of Ukraine had created a flow of refugees out of Ukraine. He helped at the border for two weeks transporting families by car for three hours to Kraków where they might then go to other parts of Europe. One of the families he met shared their contact information with him, and later on, he offered to sponsor them, the Stetsenko-Kulyk family — a gra...
2022-09-19
21 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
The New Old and the Old Old
Joan Churchill, the Executive Director of the Sebastopol Area Senior Center, joins me to talk about the programs and activities for seniors as well as some of the issues that impact seniors in our community — even who identifies as a senior these days.Before we dive into the interview, I want to highlight a few news items from our conversation. * The Harvest Cafe inside the Center re-opens today for lunch from 11am to 1pm Monday through Friday. Member and non-members are both welcome. Takeout is also available.* On Thursday, the Senior Center is ho...
2022-08-23
22 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Analy returns with new Superintendent
“Analy” returns this week as the name of the high school in Sebastopol that serves West County, which served as its name last year. Students will be back at Analy on Thursday. Chris Meredith is the new Superintendent for West Sonoma County Union High School District. Most recently, Chris was the Director of Human Resources for Windsor Unified School District. He has a lot of challenges in this new job. I caught up with Chris to talk about his priorities, turning things around in the District after several difficult years as well as his relationship with...
2022-08-08
13 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
Inside Horizon Shine Village
Horizon Shine was put forth as a name by a homeless person on Morris Street and everyone in the planning session liked it. It’s now the name of the village community on North Gravenstein Avenue built by Sonoma Applied Village Services (SAVS) and opened in February 2022. About 20 RVs and 30 individuals were relocated from Morris Street to Horizon Shine Village where they have access to showers, a daily hot meal, and case workers who can help them figure out how to get what they need. The effort, which came about through a partnership between SAVS and the Sebastopol City Co...
2022-07-21
24 min
Make:cast
Humanmade SF's Ryan Spurlock
A refugee from TechShop in SF, Ryan Spurlock took what he learned there and applied it to a new makerspace called Humanmade located in the design district of San Francisco. Two things stand out about this makerspace. One is how it was funded: a local developer whom the City required to set aside funding for community development worked with Ryan to locate space and build it out. Second, Humanmade has worked with the City of San Francisco to establish a Next Generation Advanced Manufacturing training program.https://make.co/make-cast/
2022-07-09
17 min
Make:cast
The Magic Never Died - Maker Faire Long Island
Maker Faires are slowly coming back. After not happening for two years, Maker Faire Long Island took place in June at Port Jefferson Village's Explorium. Everybody was happy to come back. said co-producers of Maker Faire Long Island, Angeline Judex and Lisa C. Rodriguez. Angeline is the Explorium's Executive Director and Lisa is in digital media marketing for the science center. They share that with the makers back and families gathered, the magic was back.https://make.co/make-cast/
2022-06-24
15 min
Make:cast
Wyoming's Maker Access Pass with Tyler Kerr
Tyler Kerr runs the Innovation Wyrkshop, a makerspace at the University of Wyoming. During COVID, state officials saw the potential for makerspaces in vocational rehab and developing skills in local communities. And so they are funding the build out of a network of makerspaces throughout the state.Tyler and his students set out to build a safety pass, the Maker Access Pass that would allow students to be trained in one makerspace and work with machines in another makerspace. He believes that having standardized safety training as courses is important and he'd like to share this work with...
2022-06-10
29 min
Make:cast
Playification - The Makey Makey Story
Makey Makey, a creative platform for children of all ages, turned 10 years old this month. In this episode, we talk with Jay Silver, the creative technologist behind the platform, and Jay Melican, formerly of Intel who runs the business. Jay Silver talks about creative play and learning, and the community that has grown up around Makey Makey.https://make.co/make-cast/
2022-05-27
29 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
The New School Model for West County High
There’s a new school in town. Well, not exactly. It’s a set of ideas about how to improve the old school. While the Analy/El Molino merger, and the resulting battle over the name of West County High School, would make anyone wary of promising change within the education system, Nicole Wilkinson, an Analy alumnae and teacher, gave a brilliant presentation at a school board meeting in January 2022 about the “New School Model.” It was well received by the board. However, at the same board meeting, Superintendent Toni Beal, a supporter of the New School Model, was dismisse...
2022-05-25
32 min
Make:cast
Shop Talk and Tips with Gareth Branwyn
DIY lifer Gareth Branwyn has compiled a new volume of his series, Tips and Tales of the Workshop, Volume 2. He joins Dale Dougherty to talk about how he collects tips — asking a person directly to share a tip is not very productive. He shares some of his favorite tips he has found. He talks about the aspirational quality of tips, how picking up an idea from someone can help us become better. Learn more about Frankenstein prototyping, that things aren’t perfect in the vaults of a Gothic Cathedral and that details layer one on top of another.For...
2022-05-10
34 min
Sebastopol CITY LIMITS Podcast
What's in your trash?
Our guest on this episode is the Executive Director of Zero Waste Sonoma, Leslie Lukacs. The goal of Zero Waste Sonoma broadly speaking is to reduce the amount of waste generated in Sonoma County through programs to promote reuse, recycling and composting. Zero Waste Sonoma recently received a $1 million State grant to open CRV redemption centers. Leslie explains the background on the new CRV redemption center in Sebastopol, and how it will eventually become an automated system. We talk about what happens to the things we place street side in our blue recycling bins. She explains how “wish...
2022-05-05
22 min
Make:cast
Making is So Elementary
Julie Darling, author/educator/librarian, talks her book "Social-Emotional Learning Using Makerspaces and Passion Projects: Step by Step Projects and Resources for Grades 3-6". She is a Media Specialist at A2 Steam in Ann Arbor, CA. We talk about getting fidgety kids engaged and excited. She explains that a Makerspace can be a creative place for students and an opportunity to develop social-emotional learning, which are both personal and social skills.https://make.co/make-cast/
2022-04-29
28 min
Make:cast
Mike on Make:
Mike Senese has been the Executive Editor for Make: for almost nine years. He started on volume 36 and leaves now after wrapping up issue 81. Mike joins Dale Dougherty to talk about his experiences at Make: and Maker Faire, as well as working with the maker community. See ya soon, Mike Senese.https://make.co/make-cast/
2022-04-16
18 min
Make:cast
Determination: Makers in Ukraine
Determination seems like the best word to describe the collective response of Ukrainians as they fight for their country, for their home and their freedom. One month ago, I spoke with Yuri Vlasyuk and Svitlana Bovkun who live in Kyiv. That was the day Russia invaded Ukraine. I knew them because they were producers of Maker Faire in Ukraine. I wanted to find out how they are doing and what the maker community was doing during the war. A month later, one month into the war, we talked again to find how determined they are to do anything they can...
2022-03-26
21 min
Make:cast
Fearless CNC
You might say that CNC is like a stepchild in the digital fabrication family, not the friendliest or easiest tool to get to know in the maker-space. Yet CNC is not something that most makers should be afraid of, especially as new software allows you to see in simulation what the CNC machine is going to do before you press go. In this episode, I'm joined by Anne Filson and Gary Rohrbacher, co-authors of Design for CNC. Both are professors of Architecture at the University of Kentucky and creators of AtFAB. @AtFAB_co @Fil_Ro @dalepd @makehttps...
2022-03-22
35 min
Make:cast
Share the Repair with Wayne Seltzer
My guest on this episode is Wayne Seltzer who is lifelong fixer himself. He started the U-Fix-It Clinic in Boulder, Colorado to help others learn to fix things. Wayne helped put the "you" in Fixit Clinics, making sure they empowered people to learn to do the repairs themselves rather than having an expert do it for them. Wayne's article in the current issue shares the story of how he started his own repair business one summer in New Jersey. You'll get to know Wayne and his life story from the kid doing repairs in the summer to an...
2022-03-05
44 min
Make:cast
Kiddy Copter - A Family Affair
Charles Helmholdt of Grand Rapids, Michigan designed and built a Kiddy Copter, based on the Bell 47 helicopter from the M.A.S.H TV series. In this episode of Make:cast, we talk about the how and why to build this ride for kids. What does stand out is that Charles likes to build things and he does it with and for his family. Kiddy Copter first appeared in Make: V76 in a Made on Earth article written by Mike Senese.A companion article to this video is available at: https://makezine.com/2022/02/23/kiddy-copter---a-family-affair/. It has links to...
2022-02-23
28 min
Make:cast
Maker's Knowledge with Bill Gurstelle
William Gurstelle is the author of many popular technical books, including Backyard Ballistics and the three-volume Remaking History. He has been a contributor of projects to Make: Magazine, and currently writes the Remaking History column, which features a historical invention that you can recreate at home. For the last three years, Bill has been enrolled in a doctoral program at the University of Minnesota, studying the history of science and technology. The concept of maker's knowledge comes the history of science and represents the idea that the maker of something comprehends how it works better than anyone else....
2022-02-04
26 min
Make:cast
Smaller is Big: Eben Upton of Raspberry Pi
Over nine years ago, Raspberry PI was created by a small team, led by Eben Upton as a kind of academic side project. This single board computer was a PC without a keyboard, a monitor, any kind of enclosure, an inexpensive board that could be connected to power and other USB devices. It was completely open to whatever you wanted to do with. Raspberry Pi has had big impact by going small.For Volume 79 of Make: Magazine, our board's issue, Executive Editor, Mike Senese talked to Eben Upton of the Raspberry PI Foundation. They mostly talk about the...
2022-01-21
45 min
Make:cast
Will We Be Better Prepared the Next Time?
This preview of Respiracon II (January 29-30) features Robert Read of Public Invention and Leith Greenslade of the Every Breath Counts Coalition. They are starting a conversation around open source medical devices and how makers can work more productively when the next pandemic or other emergency happens. Link to Respiracon II: https://www.pubinv.org/respiracon_ll/https://make.co/make-cast/
2022-01-13
17 min
Make:cast
Leveraging Biology to Make Things with Julie Legault and Justin Pahara
Julie Legault and Dr. Justin Pahara are the Canadian co-authors of "Zero to Genetic Engineering Hero," a hands-on guide to biotech experiments for the classroom, home and makerspace. Justin, a Cree scientist-entrepreneur with a PhD in biotechnology from University of Cambridge, lives on a farm in southern Alberta. Julie is a graphic designer from Montreal and an entrepreneur with a degree from MIT Media Lab. Together they started AminoLabs and wrote this book on experimenting safely and ethically with genetic engineering.Photos and URLs available at https://makezine.com/2021/12/16/leveraging-biology-to-make-things/.https://make.co/make-cast/
2021-12-16
23 min
Make:cast
The World's Largest Makerspace in a Town of 10,000 or Less
FabLab ICC is located at Independence Community College in Independence, Kansas. It's a small town of less than 10,000 people in southeast Kansas. Yet for a town of that size, FabLab ICC with 15,000 sq.ft. of space is large. Jim Correll is the Director of FabLab ICC and Tim Haynes is the Manager. They are my guests on this episode to talk about how their FabLab serves not just students, but also the community at large. Two of their programs are the Food Fab Lab and a Guitar Fab Factory. All of this you can find out by reading their newsletter...
2021-11-23
34 min
Make:cast
Dr. Ann-Louise Davidson on Innovation as a Material Practice
Making stuff, engaging in some form of material practice, is essential for students who are to become innovators, says Dr. Ann-Louise Davidson. She is an Associate Professor of Education and Concordia University Research Chair in Maker Culture in Montréal, Canada. She is the Director of the Concordia University Innovation Lab. She is also Associate Director of the Milieux Institute for Arts, Culture and Technology and she directs #MilieuxMake, the Milieux makerspace initiative. Her work focuses on maker culture, social innovation, inclusion and innovating with advanced pedagogical approaches and digital technologies. She has also created the children's book, Amber the M...
2021-11-13
36 min
Make:cast
Best Maker Schools - Kent State University
nt State University, the Design Innovation Hub is a central resource on campus that provides makespace access and connects to the other makerspaces on campus. What is unique is its focus on fashion, design and art. In this episode, I talk to J.R. Campbell who is the Executive Director of the Design Innovation Initiative and Andrea Oleniczak who manages the hub. Campbell believes that a makerspace provides the on-ramps and off-ramps for a student to explore their interests outside of major. Oleniczak sees the opportunity to create an ecosystem that includes the larger community outside the school.https...
2021-10-29
26 min
Make:cast
Best Maker Schools University of Maryland College Park
Makerspaces are becoming a fixture on college campuses. In this episode, the first of a series of conversations with the people who manage makerspaces at the Best Maker Schools in higher ed, we talk with two people involved in makerspaces at the University of Maryland, College Park. Rick Blanton manages Terrapin Works at the Clark School of Engineering. Dr. Bill Pugh is a retired professor of computer science who established the Singh Family Sandbox makerspace in a new computer science building, built with a donation from the founders of Oculus. Last year, a group of makerspace leaders on campus formed...
2021-10-22
33 min
Make:cast
Explaining Electronics with Charles Platt
Charles Platt, the bestselling author of Make: Electronics, talks about his background as a writer and how he wanted to explain electronics through hands-on demonstrations and full-color diagrams in his Make: Electronics book, which is coming out in a Third Edition. It's a book he wished he'd had as a kid. https://www.makershed.com/products/make-electronics-3rd-edition-printhttps://make.co/make-cast/
2021-10-08
36 min
Make:cast
The Making of A Scientist/Maker/Teacher
I met Dr. Steve M. Potter at Maker Faire Atlanta, which was hosted by Georgia Tech, where Dr. Potter was a professor of neuroengineering. His experience at Maker Faire led him to take a maker sabbatical and explore makerspaces around the world. He has written a book for educators, "How to Motivate Your Students to Love Learning". The book emphasizes engaging students in real-world problems. In this conversation, we explore how Steve became a scientist, maker and teacher.Make: Education Forum - https://make.co/educationforum"How to Motivate Your Students to Love Learning" book - https...
2021-08-27
30 min
Make:cast
Making A Customizable Tool Roll
A tool roll is a way to store all kinds of things that you might want to carry with you. Parker Thomas has created a customizable toll roll called the Tego Adventure Kit and it more kit than an end product. You can decide which kind of pouches or pockets suit you and what you want to carry with you. In this episode, Parker shares how this idea came to him, how he got it made and how he cultivated a community around it that added to his original idea and helped make the product better. Kickstarter: Tego...
2021-08-13
18 min
Make:cast
A Better Way to Teach Geometry Using 3D Models
Joan Horvath and Rich Cameron, authors of Make: Geometry, explain how to use 3D models to teach geometry, which can help students visualize and grasp the basic shapes. Joan describes herself as a recovering rocket scientist who worked at JPL. Rich was an early RepRap 3D printer enthusiast. Together they have created a practical, hands-on approach to teaching geometry. Make: Books editor, Patrick DiJusto talks to Joan and Rich.https://make.co/make-cast/
2021-08-06
24 min
Make:cast
The 5% Solution For Right to Start
My guest is Victor Hwang, who organized the Right to Start movement that seeks to open doors for more people to become entrepreneurs and create an ecosystem in America that supports entrepreneurial activity. After many years leading entrepreneurship efforts at the Kauffman Foundation in Kansas City, Victor started his own organization built around the belief that becoming an entrepreneur is a fundamental right that anyone can exercise. In this episode, we talk about the four-decade decline in entrepreneurial activity in the US, how the pandemic has caused a spike in new businesses and why it can be a good time...
2021-07-28
41 min
Make:cast
Fixing Broken Machines From the Amazon Return Bin
Debra Daun's superpower is fixing broken machines, such as 3D printers. She runs the MakerLab at Joliet Junior College in Joliet, Illinois. She has figured out that she can get used and abused machines that have been returned to Amazon. She bids for them at auction and then repairs them or adds the odd parts to her boneyard. She's been able to add more machines that she uses to teach students 3D printing in the makerspace. The more broken the machine, she says, the happier she is.Photos and transcript available at: https://makezine.com/2021/07/19/fixing-broken-machines-from-the-amazon-return-bin/https...
2021-07-20
29 min
Make:cast
3D Modeling for Makers
Lydia Sloan Cline is the author of Fusion 360 for Makers, which is out in a new second edition. She teaches 3D design and fabrication at Johnson County Community College in Overland Park, Kansas, where she began as a drafting professor with a degree in Architecture. Patrick DiJusto, Make: Books editor, interviews Lydia in this episode. They talk about using generative design, a way of telling software what you to build and have it present you with multiple design options. She also talks about how 3D printing first came into the community college where she taught drafting and how it became...
2021-07-09
19 min
Make:cast
Emotion and Empathy Are Glue for Makers -- Dr. Andreea Gorbatai
In 2020, Dr. Andreea Gorbatai and two co-authors published a research paper in the journal Organization Science titled: "Making Space for Emotions: Empathy, Contagion, and Legitmacy's Double-Edged Sword." It's about the maker movement and what holds it together. It turns out, it's not skills and tools as much as it is emotions and empathy -- they are the glue for community. Dr. Gorbatai is a professor in the management department at the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley. Growing up in Romania, she is a sociologist by training and she is particularly interested in studying "new forms of...
2021-07-01
39 min
Make:cast
Making and Thinking Big in Tulsa
In episode #22 of Make:cast, I learn about the new building for Fab Lab Tulsa from its Executive Director, Nathan Pritchett. The new building is under development and scheduled to open in 2022. The project had started well before COVID-19 but has stayed on track even during the pandemic. Overall, the future of Fab Lab Tulsa is bright. "I'm just really bullish on the future of fab labs and maker spaces," said Nathan. Tulsa has a lot of talent in the community but the makerspace needed more resources to keep up. "We started looking at what the right size facility would...
2021-06-07
32 min
Make:cast
What An AI Nose Knows
Like many of us during Covid-19, Benjamin Cabé was baking sourdough bread at home in France. He wondered how he might tell if his dough was done proofing. He began working on an artificial nose that uses physical sensors to detect gas but also uses machine learning to identify the smell. His project is on the cover of Make Magazine, v 77. In this conversation, we talk about how his nose works, how it knows what it does and the limits of what it knows.Links: About Make Magazine - Vol 77 - https://makezine.com/2021/05/05/announcing-make-vol-77-machine-learning-and-more/
2021-05-28
31 min
Make:cast
The What, How and Why of CO2 Monitoring with Guido Burger
CO2 Tech Guru Guido Burger from Germany joins Dale Dougherty to explain his research into monitoring CO2 and show how to build his CO2 traffic light, which can warn if the level of CO2 is rising. We look at how CO2 sensors work as we go through the hardware and software that make up a CO2 device and graph the data it produces. These are devices that students can learn to build and create a full-featured Internet of Things application.The CDC recently updated its understanding of the transmission of COVID-19 to focus on spread through aerosols, which...
2021-05-18
1h 06
Make:cast
You CAN Get Started 3D Printing
Make: books editor, Patrick DiJusto talks 3D Printing with the authors of Getting Started with 3D Printing, Liza Wallach Kloski and Nick Kloski. Liza and Nick run HoneyPoint3D, which started in 2012 as a small 3D printing shop in Northern California. Explaining 3D printing to many people was the motivation for them to write this book, whose first edition came out in 2016 and is just now updated in a second edition. This conversation is a chance to look at what's changed in the world of 3D printing over the last ten years. While the hype has died down around 3D...
2021-05-06
32 min
Make:cast
Everything In Its Own Jar
Mark Zalme had an idea how to organize everything in clear jars that could be mounted on pegboard in his garage in Asheville, North Carolina. Over 3-4 years, he developed this idea into a product called WallWerx, a workspace organizing system. In this episode, we talk about Mark's product but we also learn about the process he went through to prototype, manufacture, assemble and distribute that product. This process wasn't easy, and a lot of what happened along the way was unexpected; a lot of trial and error. He is working on finding ways to market this new product. "I've...
2021-04-29
19 min
Make:cast
Mister Rogers - a Maker and More
A new book out April 20 looks at the learning science that Fred Rogers used to develop an understanding of the "inner needs of children" and then construct Mister Rogers' Neighborhood to reflect those needs. The book is called "When You Wonder, You're Learning" and its authors, Gregg Behr and Ryan Rydzewski who are with the Grable Foundation in Pittsburgh, are my guests on this episode of Make:cast. We talk about the ideas behind the work of Fred Rogers and why they are still relevant for today's learners and young makers.https://make.co/make-cast/
2021-04-20
34 min
Make:cast
Build It and See What Happens with Austin McChord
As a result of a $50 million grant to the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) in 2017, the Maker Library & Innovative Learning Complex of the Future is under construction on campus. The new $17.5 million building will house a makerspace open to all students. The man behind the largest donation ever to RIT is Austin McChord, an entrepreneur from Connecticut who has a surprising success story. In this conversation with him, I learned that he wasn't the best student in high school or college. He had his own ideas, which he worked on while not doing his homework. He started a company after...
2021-04-03
24 min
Make:cast
Making New Music with Helen Leigh
"All instruments are inventions and all music is made up -- so make your own using microcontrollers," writes Helen Leigh in Volume 76 of Make Magazine, encouraging people to create and invent musical instruments, as she has. In this conversation with Helen Leigh, we learn about her upbringing in Wales, how she first learned about electronics at a makerspace in London, why she objects to call herself "self-taught" and her new lab in Portland Oregon. She came from a family that consumed lots of music and her early musical experiences were singing choral music in church in Wales. Her...
2021-03-25
36 min
Make:cast
Making Things That Don't Already Exist with Neil Cohen
How do you transform ordinary stuff into meaningful things, even beautiful things? How you make things that don't yet exist, something original rather than a copy? That's the topic of this conversation with New York-based industrial designer, Neil Cohen. |"Some of what I do in my work is making something that starts out one way," he says, "And then when you do something to it, it forms into something else or reveals something else." Neil is a graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), and after college, he got on a motorcycle going around the country...
2021-03-16
43 min
Make:cast
Looking for Your Next Adventure - David Lang
David Lang, author of Zero to Maker and co-founder of OpenROV, recently decided to stop doing what he had been doing and begin looking for something new, looking for his next adventure. During a pandemic, it seems hard to think about your next adventure. Yet I suspect that many are thinking about what’s next, and preparing ourselves for a new challenge. David says it's just as scary this time as it was back when he walked into TechShop not knowing anything about being a maker. He seems to be following his interest in science and how scientists can learn fr...
2021-03-05
34 min
Make:cast
Me and My Robots - Jorvon Moss
Jorvon Moss creates companion robots for himself, working nights and weekends. I had run into Jorvon at Maker Faire Bay area as well as at the downtown LA Maker Faire. He always had one of his robot creations on the shoulder. In this interview, I wanted to learn about how he got started making and get to know the person behind the robots and the goggles. He calls himself Odd Jayy on Twitter, because some people might think he was odd, but he and his robots have become quite popular. This interview led to a story I wrote for Make...
2021-02-11
20 min
Make:cast
The Multiple Choice Future
Our current framework for multiple-choice standardized testing is about 20 years old, dating back to legislation signed by President Bush called No Child Left Behind. The name has changed but testing still rules, although it has been disrupted by COVID-19. In this conversation with educators, Pam Moran and Ira Socol, co-authors of Timeless Learning with Chad Ratliff, we discuss how our education system responded to COVID-19 and how students have responded by turning off their cameras. Can we imagine a future where instead of multiple choice tests, schools offer students multiple and different ways to learn?https://make.co/make-cast/
2021-02-01
47 min
Make:cast
Scott Swaaley - Engineer, Educator & Entrepreneuer
As a maker, San Diego-native Scott Swaaley is a triple-threat. He can build things; he can teach; and he can start and run his own business. An electrical engineer who became a high school teacher, Scott started Make Safe Tools in 2018 to produce products that make workshops safer. One of its products is the MakeSafe Power Tool Brake. In this podcast episode, I talk to Scott about his experiences as an engineer, educator and entrepreneur, and "how those experience overlap in unexpected ways." However, seeing himself as "constant learner" and willing to try things he didn't know if he could do...
2021-01-13
33 min
Make:cast
The Last Place For A Makerspace
The last place you might expect to find a makerspace is at The George Mark House, a pediatric palliative care facility in San Leandro, California. It is a place that cares for families who are going through the difficult end-of-life process for their child. I talk with Dr. Joan Fisher, the medical director, and Dr. Gokul Krishnan, a pioneer in the practice of maker therapy who just received a NSF grant to design and build a makerspace at the George Mark House.https://make.co/make-cast/
2020-12-30
24 min
Make:cast
Machine Learning for Beekeepers
You can learn a lot about the health of a hive by listening to the sounds that bees make, as a beekeeper would do. The developers of the Long Hive project, featured in Make Magazine, Vol 75, tell us about their efforts to use machine learning to detect the presence of the queen bee by recording the sounds of the bees in the hive.https://make.co/make-cast/
2020-12-18
23 min
Make:cast
To Maker Faire Rome with Love
Italians have a love of innovation and design and it shows at Maker Faire Rome. In this episode of Make:Cast, I look back at Maker Faire Rome in October 2019 during a pre-Covid time when live events could happen. I was guided through Maker Faire Rome by Alessandro Ranellucci, the curator of Maker Faire Rome, along with Massimo Banzi, co-founder of Arduino. Maker Faire Rome 2020 is happening as a virtual event this weekend.https://make.co/make-cast/
2020-12-12
31 min
Make:cast
Ten Years of Open Source Hardware
Ten years ago, a community came together around a definition of open source hardware to be clear about what it means to share designs for physical things, and doing so in a way that allows others to make, modify, distribute or use those things. This definition has been managed by the Open Source Hardware Association (OSHWA). In this episode, I talk with Alicia Gibb, Executive Director of OSHWA and board president, Michael Weinberg about the growth of open source hardware, its certification process and the role of open source hardware in the maker response to COVID-19.https://make.co...
2020-12-01
29 min
Make:cast
How Hard Can It Be?
Tim Deagan, a maker in Austin, TX, is a polymaker with many interests and fabrication projects that range from from flame effects to ham radio to leatherworking. He is the author of "Make: Fire - The Art and Science of Working with Propane" and "Modern Leatherworking for Makers." In this conversation, Tim joins me from his garage workshop and we talk shop.https://make.co/make-cast/
2020-11-20
52 min
Make:cast
Problem Solving is #1
In this episode, we talk with Sarah Boisvert, an entrepreneur with extensive work experience in manufacturing, laser technology in 3d printing, who has been focusing on workforce training. Digital fabrication technology is creating new manufacturing jobs that she calls "new collar jobs" which require digital and physical hands-on experience. In 2018, Sarah published "The New Collar Workforce: An Insider's Guide to Making Impactful Changes to Manufacturing and Training." She lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where she runs a lab in association with the local community college where she's developed a certified program for 3D printing operators. In this conversation...
2020-11-11
32 min
Make:cast
Make Anything with Open Source Projects
For anyone wanting to do something, open source makes it easier for you to get started, for creative ideas to flourish and for difficult problems to be solved by collaborating with others. I talk with Joshua Pearce about his new book, "Create, Share and Save Money Using Open Source Projects." Joshua is a professor of materials science and electrical engineering at Michigan Tech University where he directs the Michigan Tech Open Sustainability Technology Lab - acronym MOST. He's also the editor of Hardware X, a peer-reviewed journal dedicated to open source scientific hardware.https://make.co/make-cast/
2020-10-29
41 min
Make:cast
Recipes for Operating a Makerspace
The co-founders of Maker Works in Ann Arbor, Michigan have written an operations guide for makerspaces. In this episode, we talk with Tom Root, one of the authors of "The Intentional Makerspace: Operation" about how to think of recipes as a way of managing a makerspace, predicatably and safely.https://make.co/make-cast/
2020-10-21
34 min
Make:cast
Matching Talent to Opportunity at mHUB Chicago
Over the last year or two. mHUB Chicago has begun offering product development services that allow makers, engineers, and others to work on paid projects for corporate clients, filling a need for rapid prototyping for those companies and helping entrepreneurs bring in some money while they get started on their own project. Recently, mHUB was awarded a three-year, $1.3 million grant from the federal government to scale these services, developing new opportunities for talent and providing a service to client companies. In this episode of Makecast, I'm talking about matching talent to opportunity with two of mHUB Chicago's founders...
2020-10-08
19 min
Depth and Light
#10: Dale Dougherty
This episode features a conversation with Dale Dougherty. Dale is the co-founder of O’Reilly Media and the founder of Maker Media, which publishes Make Magazine and initiated the wildly popular worldwide Maker Faires. Dale is widely considered to be the godfather of the Maker Movement and is one of its greatest champions. We talk to Dale about his partnership with Tim O’Reilly, developing the first-ever commercial website, the dawn of the World Wide Web, and the past-present-future of the Maker Movement. Dale also goes into detail about best practices for empowering Makers and DIYers in schools and everywhere. ••• Follow Dal...
2019-11-25
51 min
MADE
MAdE - Ep - 43 World Maker Faire 2018 Maker Dinner (ft. Dale Dougherty & MakerMex)
Welcome to Episode 43 of MAdE the podcast about Purpose-Driven: Design, Making and Manufacturing. This week we talk with Makers at the World Maker Faire 2018 Maker Dinner in New York City. Featuring Dale Dougherty and Maker Mex. Links to the makers and an english transcript for the interview in Spanish coming soon.
2018-09-22
42 min
The Great Big Beautiful Podcast
Episode 128: Dale Dougherty
This week, we're switching things up, going DIY, and welcoming Dale Dougherty to the show. Dougherty is pretty much the godfather of the current Maker movement. On this episode, we chat about why DIY and "tinkering" are important skills for kids, why the Maker message can be so compelling, surefire methods for engaging kids with STEM subjects, the shifting roles and dynamics Dougherty has seen among the genders at Maker Faire, the Amazon show Annedroids (which he consults for), and where he'd be on the perfect day.
2017-05-05
51 min
How to Listen to Audiobook in Nonfiction, Social Sciences
Free to Make by Dale Dougherty | Free Audiobook
Listen to full audiobooks for free on :https://hotaudiobook.com/freeTitle: Free to Make Author: Dale Dougherty, Ariane Conrad - contributor, Tim O'Reilly - foreword Narrator: Jeff Machado Format: Unabridged Length: 10 hrs and 43 mins Language: English Release date: 01-10-17 Publisher: North Atlantic Books Genres: Nonfiction, Social Sciences Summary: Dale Dougherty, creator of MAKE: magazine and the Maker Faire, provides a guided tour of the international phenomenon known as the Maker Movement, a social revolution that is changing what gets made, how it's made, where it's made, and who makes it. Free to Make is a call to join what...
2017-01-11
10h 43
Unwind and Relax With the Magic of Free Audiobook
Free to Make: How the Maker Movement is Changing Our Schools, Our Jobs, and Our Minds Audiobook by Dale Dougherty
Listen to this audiobook in full for free onhttps://hotaudiobook.com/freeID: 281040 Title: Free to Make: How the Maker Movement is Changing Our Schools, Our Jobs, and Our Minds Author: Dale Dougherty Narrator: Jeff Machado Format: Unabridged Length: 10:43:07 Language: English Release date: 01-10-17 Publisher: North Atlantic Books Genres: Non-Fiction, Self Development, Health & Wellness, Science & Technology, Education, Technology & Engineering Summary: A fascinating study of the global Maker Movement that explores how ‘making’ impacts our personal and social development—perfect for enthusiastic DIY-ers Dale Dougherty, creator of MAKE: magazine and the Maker Faire, provides a guided tour of the international phenomenon known as t...
2017-01-10
10h 43
Access Essential Full Audiobooks in Non-Fiction, Computers & Technology
Free to Make: How the Maker Movement is Changing Our Schools, Our Jobs, and Our Minds by Dale Dougherty
Please visit https://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/281040 to listen full audiobooks. Title: Free to Make: How the Maker Movement is Changing Our Schools, Our Jobs, and Our Minds Author: Dale Dougherty Narrator: Jeff Machado Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 10 hours 43 minutes Release date: January 10, 2017 Genres: Computers & Technology Publisher's Summary: A fascinating study of the global Maker Movement that explores how ‘making’ impacts our personal and social development—perfect for enthusiastic DIY-ers Dale Dougherty, creator of MAKE: magazine and the Maker Faire, provides a guided tour of the international phenomenon known as the Maker Movement, a social revolution that is changing what gets made...
2017-01-10
10 min
Access Essential Full Audiobooks in Non-Fiction, Computers & Technology
Free to Make: How the Maker Movement is Changing Our Schools, Our Jobs, and Our Minds by Dale Dougherty
Please visithttps://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/281040to listen full audiobooks. Title: Free to Make: How the Maker Movement is Changing Our Schools, Our Jobs, and Our Minds Author: Dale Dougherty Narrator: Jeff Machado Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 10 hours 43 minutes Release date: January 10, 2017 Genres: Computers & Technology Publisher's Summary: A fascinating study of the global Maker Movement that explores how ‘making’ impacts our personal and social development—perfect for enthusiastic DIY-ers Dale Dougherty, creator of MAKE: magazine and the Maker Faire, provides a guided tour of the international phenomenon known as the Maker Movement, a social revolution that is changing what gets made, how...
2017-01-10
10h 43
Internet History Podcast
92. Founder of the World's First Commercial Website, Dale Dougherty
SummaryDale Dougherty was the organizer of the world’s first ever web developers conference, the World Wide Web Wizards Workshop in July of 1993. This was where Tim Berners-Lee and Marc Andreessen first met. Dale is also the man who coined the term “Web 2.0” when he organized the first Web 2.0 Summit. But Dale was also the co-founder of the web’s first ever commercial website, Global Network Navigator, or GNN. Today, Dale is probably best known as the founder of Make Magazine, Maker Faires and the entire Maker Movement. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privac...
2015-12-14
56 min
Internet History Podcast
92. Founder of the World's First Commercial Website, Dale Dougherty
SummaryDale Dougherty was the organizer of the world’s first ever web developers conference, the World Wide Web Wizards Workshop in July of 1993. This was where Tim Berners-Lee and Marc Andreessen first met. Dale is also the man who coined the term “Web 2.0” when he organized the first Web 2.0 Summit. But Dale was also the co-founder of the web’s first ever commercial website, Global Network Navigator, or GNN. Today, Dale is probably best known as the founder of Make Magazine, Maker Faires and the entire Maker Movement. See acast.com/privacy for privacy an...
2015-12-14
56 min
Internet History Podcast
92. Founder of the World's First Commercial Website, Dale Dougherty
SummaryDale Dougherty was the organizer of the world’s first ever web developers conference, the World Wide Web Wizards Workshop in July of 1993. This was where Tim Berners-Lee and Marc Andreessen first met. Dale is also the man who coined the term “Web 2.0” when he organized the first Web 2.0 Summit. But Dale was also the co-founder of the web’s first ever commercial website, Global Network Navigator, or GNN. Today, Dale is probably best known as the founder of Make Magazine, Maker Faires and the entire Maker Movement. See acast.com/priv...
2015-12-14
00 min