back to article Sparkfun punts bonkers banana-piano kit at hardware hackers

Sparkfun - a supplier of components, widgets, doohickeys and other frivolities - is now making its own hardware in the form of the Makey Makey, which turns just about anything into a keyboard. The Makey Makey started out as a Kickstarter project from a couple of MIT Medialab types, who used the money raised to commission …

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  1. pardonme
    Coffee/keyboard

    fingerworks!

    Great to see someone-else with a fingerworks keyboard!

    1. johnnytruant

      Re: fingerworks!

      I'd love one of those. But just as I could afford one, a certain fruity company bought Fingerworks and pulled all their products.

      Perhaps I should sue Apple for causing my rsi.

  2. frank ly

    Solving real-world 'problems' .....

    " ...wood was a little too conductive and the 3mm gap between the panels wasn't isolating enough - a wider gap works,... "

    Try putting a 1Megohm (or 2M or 500k) resistor in series with the contact wires. That would enable you to have a smaller wood gap while still being able to detect a finger press. Go on, do some real engineering.

    1. Bill Ray (Written by Reg staff)

      Re: Solving real-world 'problems' .....

      Oddly enough I did, and higher too. Sadly I haven't the knowledge to know why it didn't work, but then if I did I'd be well outside the target demographic.

      Bill.

  3. Chris O'Shea
    Thumb Up

    An obvious use (to me)

    Build your own TV game show buzzer system!

    You have enough contacts, and it would take very little code to detect who pressed first, to light up individual lamps for individual buzzers, and a team lamp to indicate which teams buzzer was pressed first ...

    ... or of course you can just hack one of the quiz controllers for a Playstation or Xbox quiz game :-)

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: An obvious use (to me)

      Back in the early eighties a local political party were trying to correlate several years' doorstep survey results to predict individual voter's likely voting intentions. This involved several people each having a different survey result list. They had to find a matching name entry and announce their survey's result. Another person applied "prediction rules" to the voter's combined history input - and marked up the new campaign list. It required a lot of mental concentration - and was very prone to human error.

      A set of momentary switches on the Apple II ports plus a little Basic program "automated" the process. People just pushed their buttons for the appropriate survey result - and the "voting prediction" for that person's combination was made visible.

      Can't remember when local political parties stopped knocking on doors. No doubt the new Government Snooper's Charter will provide a better source of information.

  4. Franklin
    Thumb Up

    Mad science at its best

    Huh. That conductive paint looks interesting.

    I got into Arduino hacking so I could make programmable sex toys (I've built a prototype vibrator guaranteed not to get the user off--it shuts down when you get close--and another that's an Arduino cobbled to a Neurosky EEG chip so that you can turn a sex toy on or off just by thinking about it, hands-free). This tech looks like it has all kinds of interesting potential uses. I'm already envisioning conductive ink painted on a person, with software on the Arduino that will trigger changes in the output when someone else touches it...dunno if the normally (relatively) low resistance of skin will be a problem though.

    Back to the workshop!

    1. Richard 12 Silver badge
      Boffin

      Re: Mad science at its best

      Conductive paint probably won't work, skin alone is of a very similar conductivity.

      That said, you can probably build a variable resistor into someone's skin, by using a pair of contacts and measuring the resistance between each of them and to the other person.

      If that works, then a 2D touchpad is simply a case of another pair of contacts and multiplexing.

      This calls for an experiment!

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Xmas tree lights?

    Just wondering if anyone has yet produced an RGB led that can be polled using a digital comms signal impressed on its two DC power wires. The idea is that you drape the power cable round the Xmas tree and just attach the desired leds with a bee-sting type of connection. A small controller can be programmed to assign each led dynamically to a group - and then poll the groups to set their changes in colour/intensity.

    A proper PC and a camera input might be needed initially to cycle through the leds to establish their positions on the tree - if you want pretty moving patterns.

  6. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    I had this idea too

    Its feasible, something along the lines of a reverse RFID which upon receiving a code lights up with the last 4 digits of that code representing the colour intensity and brightness.

    Maybe use a PIC10F222 or similar, would be pricey but they are down to 22p in bulk now.

    A similar circuit exists which uses discrete transistors to get shift register functionality, published in EDN around 1993 IIRC.

  7. Paul Horstink

    My 15 year old daughter came by this 2 months ago and convinced me to 'pledge a donation' for the project. My kit is currently on it's way. Can't wait to experiment with it, and connect it up to the Arduino...

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