DIY Paradise at Maker Faire

The annual Bay Area carnival attracts the best Makers in the land. See what caught our eye this year
DIY Drones: The folks at DIYDrones.com create home-brew UAVs like the Air Force's Predator and Global Hawk. This rig uses a Lego Mindstorms computer, an accelerometer and gyroscope to measure orientation and a GPS module to track its location to allow for autonomous flight. Photo by John Mahoney

We're back from this weekend's Maker Faire, the third-annual event in San Mateo, CA . Our friends at Make continue to up the ante, bringing DIYers from far and wide to show off their projects at the ultimate geek county fair.

Launch our gallery to see just a handful of the amazing stuff on display this weekend, from the iPhone-controlled watering can to the hacked Guitar Hero controllers that serve as—gasp!—real instruments. PopSci Podcaster Chuck Cage also threw together the great Maker Faire highlight reel below.

If you missed the Faire this weekend, never fear: the circus rolls into Austin, Texas later this year.

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deadtrout
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no doubt about it, this event sucked!

I enjoy the make blog and have it as one of my daily reads. I'll also occasionally buy a copy of Make Magazine even though I find this micromag to be overpriced. But nothing readied me for the dissapointment of the Maker Faire.

Let's start at the gate. $50 for two people. That is only the start of the insulting prices. Make Mag shows it's deep love for it's community by allowing vendors to charge $7 for hot dogs and $3 for fountain drinks. That kinetic wood model which fetches $5 in retail stores has a pricetag of $40. Second-hand shirts attempt to fetch $60. That's right, a $10 shirt plus a silkscreened bird = $60.

Make Mag thinks it's community is made of idiots. They have no shame.

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