4 Student Inventions That Are Helping Their Communities Four student groups from across the United States each designed and built incredible pieces of tech to better their communities. We were lucky enough to get some of the participants to write down and share their reasonings behind their projects, and explain how they overcame the struggles they faced.
Intel® Curie™ Low-Power Compute Module at Mouser Unleash a low-power hardware module for wearables and other industrial devices. Featuring the Intel Quark™ SE SoC, this low-power, 32-bit MCU with 384kB flash and 80kB SRAM memory offers a complete solution that comes with compute, motion sensors, BLE, battery charging and pattern matching capabilities for developing always-on applications.
Review: Shopbot Desktop Max Gives Pro CNC Router Quality — For a Price The price tag is a little steep, but the ShopBot Desktop MAX retains the precision and software package that made its smaller cousin, the ShopBot Desktop, a great entry-level machine with twice the cutting area.
Here's the Dastardly Winner of the Worst Cup Ever Contest We had some really great entries to the Worst Cup Ever contest. Many of you put in some real time and creativity into trying to figure out a cup that would be nearly impossible to drink out of, but in the end Keifer Read pulled out the win with his devious Canteen of Denial.
Tiny Cooking, It's an Actual Thing! Who knew there was a community of chefs who like cooking in Lilliputian kitchens? It's real food, just in tiny, tiny proportions.
Hebocon is a crappy robot competition that celebrates failure. Their dedication to crappiness is so great that even the winners lament that their bots weren't crappy enough to lose.
Dustin Sloan and Trenton Charlson made a chainsaw-powered tricycle and motorized Little Tikes car and use them to charge around campus.
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