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Paperback Make: Technology on Your Time Volume 16 Book

ISBN: 0596523327

ISBN13: 9780596523329

Make: Technology on Your Time Volume 16

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Format: Paperback

Condition: New

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Book Overview

No mission is impossible when makers put their mind to it. MAKE Volume 16 will help you get smart with a special section on spy tech. Learn how to build and use tiny surveillance devices, and how to know if a spy is using them on you. From tiny video cameras to sneaky recorders, this volume has enough cool stuff to make James Bond's inventor Q envious.

Customer Reviews

1 rating

One of my favorite issues...

The DIY (Do It Yourself) movement is very much alive and well, and one periodical that carries the DIY banner is Make magazine. I *really* liked Make: Technology on Your Time Volume 16 this month, as it touched on some projects that cover a subject I've always been fascinated with... spying. :) Contents: Made on Earth The First Picture Show Making Make: Television Cool Old Chemistry Sets Junk Pedalers The Make: Way Race Car Star Bust Kalavinka Bike Frames Sparky 2: No Sellout DIY-brary I, Robot DIY: Outdoors, Circuits, Telephony, Home Meet TRIZ Fun Idea Vending Machine Upload: Digital Arts and Crafts 1+2+3: Alien Head Projector Toys, Tricks, and Teasers Toolbox Workshop: Len Cullum Maker's Calendar Howtoons: Wooden Stilts Aha! Puzzle This Homebrew While the theme for this issue was "spy-tech", that doesn't mean that you'll ONLY find DIY spy gadgets here. Some of the articles, such as Cool Old Chemistry Sets, takes you back to the days when chemistry sets for kids had (gasp!) REAL LIVE CHEMICALS! Of course, we know better now than to provide actual radioactive elements that they can play with (yes, that was a common feature in some sets). The Make: Way Car Race was interesting in that it was a challenge to drive a race over two days (14 hours) using a car and parts that are no more expensive than $500. In that situation, creativity rules. But for me, the best part were the articles on how to build spy gadgets that are creative and mostly cheap. For instance, there's the talking booby trap that issues a verbal warning when someone moves an item you have attached to it. Made from a Radio Shack recording module mounted on a clothes pin, this looks like it'd be a kick to build (not to mention, to also use!) There's the survival kit that's stored in an Altoids tin (very handy). I'm planning on taking a shot at the flash drive hidden in a AA battery, as I have a spare flash drive or two I could sacrifice to this cause. And my favorite... installing a listening device in a hollowed-out book that can transmit to a receiver approximately 20 feet away. I think I can find a book or two in my collection that would work... :) Make magazine is packed with stuff like this every month. Some of the projects you'll find interesting but not practical, and some will just not be of any interest at all. But when you get an issue like this that has a number of projects that pique your interest, it's like a treasure trove of fun and learning. This was probably one of my favorite issues...
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