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Feb 7, 2012
nbezanson

Detroit area CodeYear meetup here, 2/7, 7pm

Have you been learning to program with the Codecademy‘s Code Year program? It’s not too late to start! Participants are gathering around the world to celebrate their progress and compare notes, and i3 Detroit is the venue for the Detroit-area Code Year meetup.

Like almost all of our events, non-members are explicitly welcome. Doors should be open by 6:30, meetup officially starts at 7.

(Note to members: This means the regular membership meeting has been pushed back an hour, to 8:30.)

Jan 24, 2012
nbezanson

Android meetup

Is it the fourth Tuesday? Then it’s Android meetup!

Tonight I’ll be attempting to apply the rest of the “Unbrickable” mod to my Galaxy Tab, plus whoever else shows up and whatever else gets hacked!

Meetup starts at 7pm, but there should be a member around by 6:30 so non-members are welcome any time after that. Bring toys…

Jan 18, 2012
nbezanson

Free speech: It was a good idea. (A political interlude from your friendly local electronics lab warden.)

In the electronics lab at i3 Detroit, we have a Saleae Logic8 logic analyzer. Anyone working with digital signals should have some sort of logic analyzer, and this is a good one — the software is what makes it special. And yes, that means the hardware is pretty simple, so someone cloned it. Buyers of the cloned board are expected to use the official Saleae software with it, in violation of its license, but also in breach of the trust placed in users by the Saleae designers, who obviously put tremendous effort into making a product that’s really a delight to use.

But that’s not what’s interesting. You see, the clone also emulates two other cool products, all of which are based around the same chip as the Logic8. Look closely at how the clone works, and you can learn a fair bit about all three products, about USB device IDs, about reverse-engineering and firmware loading and serial EEPROMs. You can also have quite a heated discussion about the morals of such cloning! Without even buying the thing, it’s a whole electronics lesson and more.

But that’s not what’s interesting, either. What’s interesting is that because I linked to counterfeit products sold overseas, this very blog post will soon become illegal. Working their way through Congress right now are a pair of similar, and similarly-misguided, bills aimed at protecting American interests. (Which they won’t do.) They House version is SOPA (the Stop Online Piracy Act) and the Senate version is PIPA (the PROTECT IP Act), which expands to the tragically hilarious “Preventing Real Online Threats to Economic Creativity and Theft of Intellectual Property Act”.

And I wouldn’t be talking about them if I didn’t think they might pass. The entertainment industry has a lot of money to buy more rope with which to hang themselves, by which I mean, legislation to imprison their customers. That doesn’t affect me; I gave up caring about movies years ago; but I do very much enjoy the freedom to talk about any intellectual pursuit that interests me, including the ingenuity of Chinese electronics counterfeiters.

What’s really insidious is that it wouldn’t just be illegal to link to counterfeit goods, or the shoot-first-ask-questions-later manner in which websites accused of doing so would be summarily zorched from the internet. Nor the guilty-until-proven-innocent way in which the burden of restoring the good name of one’s site falls on the zorchee. Both of those are bad, and would surely leave many nonprofit sites without the resources to defend themselves, but no, what makes my skin crawl is that the very act of providing information about how to get around the censorship, would itself become criminal.

Now, I don’t know about you, but as a self-described hacker, I enjoy circumventing limitations. It’s the single characteristic that I cite when asked to explain the outside-the-box problem solving skills of which my employer is so fond. Hackers like clever solutions to tricky problems (that’s how inventions get invented, after all), and most of us like to share the things we learn. That’s the sort of creativity our government should be encouraging.

So why are these two horrible bills before Congress right now? Because our elected representatives don’t understand the internet. They listen to whoever talks to them, and mostly, that’s lobbyists for big-business interests. You can change that situation right now, by educating yourself and then by getting in touch with the well-intentioned but tragically misguided folks in Washington. If these bills go away in their present form, they’ll be back when the heat dies down, so please stay informed and help preserve the freedom that makes us who we are.

Thank you.

Jan 13, 2012
nbritsky

Instrument & Jam Night – 1/27 @ 8p

There are thousands of different instruments out there in the world and it’s a terrible idea to play them all at once…therefore i3 Detroit will play them all at once.

Join us for a night of fun with instruments from the common to the wacky.  Bring your instrument(s) to the event to play or share.  Or just bring your curiosity.

We will have an instrument show and tell followed by a petting zoo (try all sorts of instruments around the shop) and then we will have a jam session with all the instruments together.  The basics of a blues scale will be taught and some very basic jazz concepts.  Event starts at 8p.  No fee to partake but donations welcome to keep the lights on.

Jan 12, 2012
switlikm

Arduino Meetup Tonight 1/12/12

Got a microcontroller project that is gathering dust?  Why not bring it by the electronics room at i3Detroit tonight (7pm-10pm).  Bring any Arduino or microcontroller projects for a round of show and tell and some brain storming.  I will be bringing my Arduino projects from the 2011 Detriot Maker Faire that I want to revise.  The Microhelicopter Race Track and Audio Game Ring have been sitting idle for too long! Hope to see you there.  -SWiT

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