What is maker faire




















Maker Faire is primarily designed to be forward-looking, showcasing makers who are exploring new forms and new technologies. Maker Faire is a gathering of fascinating, curious people who enjoy learning and who love sharing what they can do. Many makers say they have no other place to share what they do. DIY Do-It-Yourself is often invisible in our communities, taking place in shops, garages and on kitchen tables.

Maker Faire is brought to you by Maker Media. Our websites use cookies to improve your browsing experience. Skip to content What is Maker Faire. The event places the city of Rome at the centre of the innovation debate: The event brings together science, technology, innovation, creating something completely new It is a fair where dreamers and talents mix and create a magical alchemy It is also the place where you learn, have fun and networking opportunities are created. About Make: Magazine Make: Magazine was the first magazine entirely dedicated to DIY technology projects: it unites, inspires, informs and entertains a community of people who engage and innovate.

About Make Community, Inc. Promoted and Implemented by. Supported by. In collaboration with. Under the patronage of. How in the world they sold this to kids in those days is now a mystery to me. I was in Silicon Valley in the late s, and I started to get more interested in the Homebrew Computer Club and similar user groups where people could get together and talk about tech-related interests. This was how I first got interested in computers.

Along the way, the idea of creating technology got sidelined as I instead started to write about it, chronicling its history. This led me to eventually become a computer research analyst instead of an engineer.

This was probably a good thing, since I loved to take things apart but had very little interest in putting them back together. And I would have been a lousy programmer or tech designer. But this did allow me to watch the birth of the tech industry close up, witnessing how it developed and has impacted our world over the last 35 years.

Fast forward to today, and I am very excited about the Maker Movement. It has the potential to turn more and more people into makers instead of just consumers, and I know from history that when you give makers the right tools and inspiration, they have the potential to change the world.

So what is the Maker Movement? The maker movement, as we know, is the umbrella term for independent inventors, designers and tinkerers.

A convergence of computer hackers and traditional artisans, the niche is established enough to have its own magazine, Make , as well as hands-on Maker Faires that are catnip for DIYers who used to toil in solitude. Makers tap into an American admiration for self-reliance and combine that with open-source learning, contemporary design and powerful personal technology like 3-D printers.

The creations, born in cluttered local workshops and bedroom offices, stir the imaginations of consumers numbed by generic, mass-produced, made-in—China merchandise. As I walked the many show floors and looked at the various exhibits, I found out that the maker movement, which started like the Homebrew Computer Clubs of the past, is made up of makers who can be defined as anyone that makes things.

While its roots are tech-related, there were people at the show teaching how to crochet, make jewelry, and even one area called Home Grown, where do-it-yourselfers showed how to pickle vegetables, can fruits and vegetables, as well as make jams and jellies. There was another area focused on eco-sustainability, bee keeping, composting and growing your own food.



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