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O'Reilly's New Magazine for DIY Tech Projects

sargon writes "O'Reilly will begin publishing a new magazine, 'Make,' in early 2005 which is aimed at the do-it-yourself crowd. To quote the home page: 'Make brings the do-it-yourself mindset to all the technology in your life. Make is loaded with exciting projects that help you make the most of your technology at home and away from home. This is a magazine that celebrates your right to tweak, hack, and bend any technology to your own will.' The first issue will focus on kite aerial photography." Any suggestions for what they should cover?

22 of 207 comments (clear)

  1. Also in the first magazine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    How to create your own DIY Tech Magazine.

  2. Make by Zorilla · · Score: 4, Funny

    user@localhost>make o'reilly
    No rule to make target 'o'reilly'. Stop.


    Fuck. Not for me, I guess.

    --

    It would be cool if it didn't suck.
  3. Archives by VistaBoy · · Score: 5, Funny

    So the archived copies of Make Magazine will be called Makefiles?

  4. In related news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Hustler has been providing a magazine which is aimed at the do-it-yourself crowd for decades.

    SCNR

    1. Re:In related news by advocate_one · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'd always thought that it was the other way round... those do-it-yourselfers had been aiming at copies of Hustler mag...

      --
      Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
  5. Some suggestions... by mikael · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...How to build your own personal reusable spacecraft using only an old washing up liquid bottle, some sellotape, a couple of lemons and a box of bicarbonate of soda.

    If that proves too difficult, I'll settle for a flying car.

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    1. Re:Some suggestions... by wertarbyte · · Score: 4, Funny

      You mixed something up, that's a topic from MakeGyver Magazine.

      --
      Life is just nature's way of keeping meat fresh.
  6. This is a tough format. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The problem here is its such a broad topic. People's interest diverge so far that it's really a much more suitable topic for a generalized search engine Google rather than a magazine format. While some people will tend to think that stuff in the kitchen is cool, others will think it should include coding. Others will want automotive and others will prefer architecture or explosives or metalwork or hide tanning or alternative energy. The Foxfire series tried to do something similar, but they also had a theme beyond just doing it yourself which was doing it the old fashioned way. That only appealed to a certain set. Coming at it from the opposite, doing it yourself and doing in the new way doesn't really seem to work as a theme.
    I think the real question is, do we still need magazines?

    1. Re:This is a tough format. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny
      I think the real question is, do we still need magazines?

      Are you the guy I saw on Flight 2451 bringing his laptop into the shitter?

    2. Re:This is a tough format. by HeyLaughingBoy · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Knowing how to turn junk into things like nails and hammerheads and axe blades and so forth is fairly valuable knowledge in the midst of a terrible disaster, no?

      No, because it's still easier to go to the next county/state and find a hardware store ... and that is why I think the magazine will fail.

      I just surfed over here from Nuts & Volts (interested parties can figure out the URL and hopefully avoid the /. effect without a link). N&V is a hardware hobbyist magazine that's beginner oriented. At the other end of the scale is Ciarcia's Circuit Cellar (of Byte mag fame). At one time or another I have subscribed to both and read many more. But they are just about the only hardware hobby magazines left. Why? The market is shrinking faster and faster. It is now so easy to get interesting things off the shelf cheaply that formerly were expensive or had to be custom built that there is little incentive for the average curious person to even become interested in building things.The barrier to entry has become so high that most won't bother when they can go write code instead.

      Same reason Heathkit went out of business: the things they offered as kits became cheaper to buy complete and with warranty at the local Circuit City.

      I like the concept of experimentation and building my own stuff -- that's why I have a basement full of electronics parts and tools, but I don't think this new magazine is going to last more than a year or so.
  7. A White-Hat-Hack-zine on paper, nice by wertarbyte · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Most magazines here (in germany) claiming to be about hacking cover subject like "How to copy ANY CD!" or how to 'hack' your neighbour's WLAN, these magazines seem to aim at 13 year old wannabe-crackers who just discovered this secret hackertool "tracert" with which they can "track and locate" other computers on "T43 n37". I hope that this new magazine will present the term "hacking" in the right light. Well, it'll be hard to receive in germany I guess.

    --
    Life is just nature's way of keeping meat fresh.
  8. Re:(full text of article incase of /.'ing) by Zorilla · · Score: 5, Funny

    I agree with this guy; carriage returns are overrated.

    --

    It would be cool if it didn't suck.
  9. I wouldn't buy it... by ThisNukes4u · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because half the fun in trying out cool stuff is thinking up the idea yourself, then trying to put your idea into a physical (or binary) representation. This magazine would take out all the fun.

    --
    thisnukes4u.net
    1. Re:I wouldn't buy it... by darkonc · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Because half the fun in trying out cool stuff is thinking up the idea yourself, ..... This magazine would take out all the fun.

      Not at all.. The magazine lets you see what other people are doing. This gives you some interesting ideas for:
      1: Things you might want to do that are (slightly or completely) different
      2: Ways of getting unusual things done on a budget not signed by the NSA.

      The guys that were the technical advisors to one of the second world war escape movies ("The Great Escape", I think) considered the possibility that it might give future jailers ideas about preventing those same tactics from being used again, then decided that what was most importat was teaching the committment to thinking up ingenious methods and diversions that was most important, while the specific tactics were all but irrelevent.

      --
      Sometimes boldness is in fashion. Sometimes only the brave will be bold.
  10. DIY CAM Lathe! by carcosa30 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    O'Reilly-- you must cover the Gingery Lathe!

    Gingery lathes are professional quality machine tools you make yourself. Not from parts. You build a furnace out of concrete and sand, you melt the aluminum, you sand-cast the basic parts. Then you use the skeleton of the lathe to machine the rest of the parts out of steel.

    There are also people out there who have turned-- no pun intended-- turned gingery lathes into CAM gingery lathes.

    BTW if gingery lathes have not been on slashdot before, they certainly deserve to be. More than, say, the Japanese guy who made his own Battle Angel Alita realdoll out of sushi-rice. IMO.

    --
    Intolerance for ambiguity is the mark of the authoritarian personality.
  11. Wired House, Wired Car by Duke+Machesne · · Score: 4, Funny

    I want to see hacks for things like dashboard-console mp3 servers running out of the trunk on the existing alternator,

    how to make my computer trick my thermostat into thinking it's a full-fledged climate control system,

    how to make an uber-scary AI haunted house at halloween,

    how to make a creepy surveillance systems that automatically close the storm shutters and say nasty things to intruders...

    I'm envisioning Martha Stuart meets Kevin Mitnick

  12. 10 books for $20 bucks by BoldAC · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Both of them are confusing sometimes...
    Both of them are popular...

    Just for reference, we are talking about this O'Reilly, not this O'Reilly.

    (grin)

    Really though, get your boss to get you a subscription to Safari O'Reilly. You get access to any 10 O'Reilly books you want each month for less than $20. We've quit buying dead trees... and we just all use this now as our library.

    1. Re:10 books for $20 bucks by shadowkoder · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I just went to that link, and I noticed in the top right corner it said "Welcome Rochester Institute of Technology" (my univ). Umm ... wow. If I understand this right, RIT pays for this service so I do not have to buy a book from them if I'm willing to forgo the benefits of the dead-tree version. I wonder how many other univ's have deal like this (and students who dont know about it) ?

  13. Re:DIY Tricorder by Simonetta · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is not exactly sardonic. The microcontroller performance/price ratio has risen greatly over the past few years. But it hasn't risen as fast as the cost of medical equipment.
    It's not uncommon to have 100-to-1 ratios between the price of the electonic parts and sensors and the retail price of specialized medical equipment. It comes from an environment of predatory lawsuits and cost-is-no-object medical insurance coverage. Health care costs are rising insanely in the USA. The only way employers are dealing with it is by not offering medical insurance benefits to their employees, which is not dealing with the issue at all. The Republican/Democrat lawmakers are bought off by the HMOs and the drug companies, and will continue to only vote for legisation that directly benefit the HMOs and drug companies.

    When people like you will need medical care in America in the future, the options will be to take a trip to another country and buy treatment at a much less cost than America, or use black-market treatments, medicines, and medical equipment that has not passed US FDA certification. DIY stuff.

    Black market medical equipment will be one hot fast-growing market for electronic developers and technicians in the next twenty years, simply due to the tens of millions of people thrown off the health insurance rolls. It will be necessary to develop an illegal, but parallel, FDA to ensure that this black-market equipment is reasonablely safe and reliable.

    Networks in medical electronic schematics, software, sensors, and parts will spring up in P2P formats. Like the P2P music file-sharers, they will be completely illegal. And, like the music sharers, they will be completely necessary and fill the vital social function of providing a market for industries that have painted themselves into a corner through their own greed and stupidity.

  14. Um..not to sound stupid, but.... by Generalisimo+Zang · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd actually be interested in something like that, and I know others would be too.

    Sometimes people forget that not everyone is endowed at birth with immense knowledge (like the parent poster apparently was :P ), and that many people would appreciate something that walks them through the simple first steps of new concepts.

    What really tees me off about a lot of tutorials and manuals, is how they'll go into great detail on the basic principles (great), and they go into great detail on solutions to intermediate and advanced level concepts (again, great), but they spend a tiny ammount of time quickly glossing over the first few steps to actually get something done (arrrghh!).

    It's sort of like getting some piece of furniture home from Ikea, and discovering that the pictographic instruction sheet had been replaced by a journeyman carpenter's course book.

    Yeah yeah, it's great to be able to see how to shingle a roof and build drywall... but I just want to know how to put friggin Tab A into Tab B so my Ikea bookcase doesn't collapse when I set it up.

    So, please don't disparage anyone who's going to actually step up to the plate and provide good solid basic knowledge to people who may not have been exposed to it in a way that they could actually USE it before.

    Basic knowledge is a good thing... except for those of you who were born knowing everything :|

  15. Re:Interest High by Jeff+Duntemann · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As I understand it, "mooks" fall somewhere between the book and magazine business model. (I'm curious where Borders will shelve them!) Print magazines are supported almost entirely by advertising revenue, and thus advertisers have almost literally the power of life and death over them. (I have edited several tech magazines in my career, and lordy, do I understand this or what?) Subscribers have been trained not to pay for print magazines by ridiculous "six free issues!" pitches, so in truth, subscriber revenue can't cover but a fraction of what the magazine costs.

    My guess is that Make will come out twice a year and be much thicker than a typical print magazine. It will probably be a thinnish book, and may cost as much as $12 or $15.

    As for advertisers, figure the people who sell the raw materials for tinkering: Radio Shack, mail order electronics parts houses, tech book publishers like Lindsay Books, and so on. The revenue from advertisers will bring the retail cover price down below what you'd expect for a tech book.

    These are guesses on my part; I have no inside information. But if I were to go back into magazine publishing again, this is how I would do it.

    I wish Tim the best of luck, and perhaps I'll be able to contribute articles.

    --73--

    --Jeff Duntemann K7JPD
    Colorado Springs, Colorado

  16. Focus on old tech by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 4, Insightful


    Dont give me projects that require the latest and the greatest. If I have to spend $300 to save $299 it isn't worth my time - though it may be really fun. If it costs $1200 - even if it involves sex it isn't going to be that fun. For example I have two old b/w gameboys lying about - tell me how to port the screens to my computer. I have tons of old hardware - tell me how to solder in flash ram from a thumbdrive into an old digital camera. Provide How-To's to the how to's, not everyone was born witha soldering iron in one hand and a Bridgeport in the other. Gimme anything that an old stick of RAM is good for. Or an old scanner, or zip drive. Have a case mod corner - I don't case mod at all - but I find them neet to look at. Starting in #3 start a basic course, a mid and advance course in electronics. Have something that involves gun powder, and another that involves a catapult. .Get feature articles about cool stuff people have done, and &exactly& how they did them. Get advertisers that supply stuff - for example, short of Radio Shack I know of no place that will sell me a resistor - get me some adverts that will. Get that "Dark Tipster" guy from Tech TV to write a column. There, hell, do you guys need any actual help? Call me.

    Sera

    --
    Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.