READER INPUT
Where makers tell their tales and offer praise, brickbats, and swell ideas.
Thanks for making the MAKE video podcast.
Your enthusiasm and love for making is inspiring.
I’ve been a crafty person all my life; I actually
co-own a yarn store ( raesyarnboutique.com) in
Lansing, Mich. I’ve always been interested in
electronics, but thought the task of learning how
to make something would be too daunting.
Then last summer someone suggested the
MAKE podcast to me and I was inspired. I picked
up a RadioShack electronics learning lab from eBay,
which came with a great collection of extra ICs,
relays, switches, resistors, etc. A little while later
I picked up my first PIC microcontroller, a PICAXE-
08M. It’s a great, cheap chip and as a bonus, it is
programmed with BASIC, which I know already. I still
have a lot to learn, but because of the MAKE video-cast and makezine.com, I am learning electronics
instead of dreaming I could. —Nick Blacklege
inches — this piece of information is missing from
the article. This will create a backstop for the tree to
press against when the hinge snaps, preventing the
tree from kicking back at the base and falling in a
completely random direction.
I’m pretty sure that the advice in Step 1, to create
the first notch “more than halfway through the tree” is
bad as well, although I don’t know that it’s as dangerous as leaving out the different heights of the two cuts.
I encourage anyone interested in felling trees to
check out The Ax Book by Dudley Cook, or watch
the series of videos at expertvillage.com/interviews/
felling-trees.htm. —Josh Larios, great-grandson of
an old-school lumberjack
It might seem gracious of Mitch Altman not to
have patented his TV-B-Gone remote control, but
the fact is that this device isn’t patentable.
For a device or process to be patentable, it must
be non-trivial and non-obvious. TV-B-Gone is neither.
The statement of the problem, “I want to be able to
shut off an annoying television,” instantly defines the
solution: build a remote control that automatically
transmits every known TV power-cycling code.
Of course, had Mr. Altman applied for a patent, he
would likely have received one, simply because patent
analysts no longer pay attention to the rules they’re
supposed to apply. —William Sommerwerck
Tim Anderson responds: Josh, you’re mostly right
about the second cut, and I’m doing it that way in the
photos. But if you make the second cut too high, it can
kick back the other way and fall the wrong direction.
Experiments with bananas will reveal how it works.
There’s certainly a lot that can be said about felling
trees, and even the people who know how to do it get
killed pretty regularly.
I’d like to start by saying how much I love MAKE
magazine and its website. I just launched an environmental site that tries to capitalize on the same DIY
spirit that you folks incite in your audience. I liked the
blog piece about energy vampires ( makezine.com/
go/vampire) and I am glad you brought it up for your
readers. I am linking on my site as well.
I would like to make a request. Could you do more
to emphasize the use of rechargeable batteries in
your electronics projects? I notice in the photos of
most of the electronics tutorials that you use stan-
It was with a fair amount of concern that I read dard batteries. Getting the tech and DIY communities
the most recent Heirloom Technology column about to use non-throwaway batteries in their projects
cutting down a tree [MAKE, Volume 12, page 152, would be a welcome victory against electronic waste
“The Widowmaker: Cutting Down A Tree”]. and pollution.
I know that part of the fun of MAKE is the element Keep up the good work and inspiration!
of surprise and learning lessons by doing, but I sus- —Ian Gunsolley, ecoevolution.org
pect the surprise of a tree kicking back and seriously
injuring or killing the reader is not one that most
would welcome.
In Step 2, the second cut is described as “just a
single cut straight toward the big notch.” It is vital
that the second cut be above the initial cut by a few
Mister Jalopy’s article “Orange Crate Racer”
[MAKE, Volume 11, page 172] was most nostalgic for
me; my friends and I built a number of these back
in the 50s. Mister Jalopy may rest easy regarding
184 Make: Volume 13