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Bre Pettis

Jul 022008
 

1Aeon is my favorite tshirt designer and so when I realized I wasn’t going to have time to make up NYCResistor t-shirts to take to a hacker conference this summer, I hired him to design and produce some t-shirts. Luckily he made time from his awesome work to come up with three designs. (I’ll take a picture of the third one soon. It’s a skeleton with soldering irons coming out of the ribs.) If you need a badass design and custom handmade t-shirts, 1Aeon is your man.

1aeon NYCResistor Shirts are IN

This design reminds me of a city of electrical parts.

1aeon NYCResistor Shirts are IN

This design has so much awesomeness, it’s hard to wrap it up in a sentence. There are elements of danger, community, electronics (the bird is holding a giant LED), and mirrored text.

There are only 85 of them and 7 are already gone and out the door. I’m no good at mail, so if you want one, you’ve gotta come find me at the hackerspace village during the last hope conference. If there are any left over I will attempt to face the demons of the post office and take orders at that time for those around the world.

CLUB MATE COMETH

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Jul 022008
 



Club Mate
is the best beverage in the universe and we are getting a pallet of it (800 1/2 liter bottles) imported. It is now on this boat. It still has to clear customs, but we are crossing our fingers wishing it was here now!

Jun 282008
 

A Little Background

Last year I went to the Chaos Communications Camp, a gathering of people who are at the intersection of software, hardware, hacking, and art. Around 2000 people gathered for a week of hardware and software hacking, presentations and discussion. I had arrived with 35 others on a coordinated trip called Hackers on a Plane. It was on this trip around a table in Cologne that NYCResistor was born.

Camp took place in a former soviet era air force base near Finowfurt that has been converted to a flight museum. With mig jets spread out on the lawn and spectacular light shows at night, it was the perfect place to have a hacker camp for a week. Fiber optic cables had been laid down along the railroad tracks to the nearest town giving camp acceptable bandwidth. (Video Link)

One of the presentations that I was really excited about was led by Jens Ohlig and Nika Bertram about creating text adventure games. Having grown up on Zork, I was inspired by this presentation enough to play the text adventure game that Jens created for camp. While I was playing his game, Jens showed up at the American tent and we got into a great conversation which led to a spontaneous tutoring session and within a few hours, Jens and I had created a basic text adventure game.

After expressing my interest in developing hacker spaces in the states, Jens and I got into a great conversation about the origins and history of the Chaos Computer Club. The CCC is a group of hardware and software hackers that has been together as a group since the early days of computing.

As we began chatting, I pulled out my pen and paper and started jotting down notes. That was a year ago and before it gets too distant, I’m breaking my notes into some blog posts. If I’ve gotten anything wrong, or I’ve forgotten important details, shoot me an email or leave a note in the comments.

The Chaos Computer Club 1981-1984

Wau Holland in a phone booth with an acoustic coupler. (Image via Tim)

It began on September 12, 1981 on a Tuesday, 5 or so people, headed by Wau Holland met with some friends to explore the issues surrounding the rise of technology and they formed the Chaos Computer Club. With 1984 around the corner, many people thought that computers would bring about more surveillance and fascism, but this fresh group thought interesting things could be done with new technology. They wanted to talk about cryptography, bbs, amateur radio, and build computers. With a strong anti-authoritarian mindset, they felt that technology should be in the hands of the people and that everyone should be able to learn anything without hindrance.

In 1984 things clicked. It was an auspicious year with issues of privacy and data surveillance and by that time there was widespread computer use. Wau had become a software developer but when he found that the software he worked on was being used by the U.S. military, he quit and moved to Hamburg which is where the CCC started gaining more momentum.

Stay tuned for the next installment in this series of blogposts about the History of the Chaos Computer Club.

Jun 282008
 

This is an amazing project. It’s an autonomous beat making robot! I daydream of seeing one of these roaming the hallway of NYCR someday! – Link

May 282008
 

Led class

The LED Matrix class went great. We used ceiling tiles to poke into and embed LEDs into them. This worked great!

Led class

Zach made up some fantastic printouts for taping onto the tiles to get perfect graphs. Feel free to check out the DXF files or print out the pdfs. (pdfs coming soon)

If you’re interested in learning how to drive LEDs, make sure to come to next weeks class titled Driving LED Displays. – Class Link

May 232008
 

Knit your way to computer security! This is the kind of thing that we at NYCResistor daydream about during craft nights on Thursday. – Link

Cake = Power

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May 142008
 

Some people think that LEDs need batteries to light up. We know different. LEDs just need cake. Alicia made this cake with wonderful LED candles. It was good.

May 072008
 

NYCResistor Party

When: May 17th 2008. 8PM
Where: NYCResistor
What: Blinking LEDs! Barbot v2 will be serving drinks!
How Much: $20 cover. (open bar)
Why: We need to pay rent and blink blink blink!