Mini Maker Faire Adelaide

It is with extreme excitement that I am finally able to share one of my favourite pieces of news about this year’s schedule for reallybigroadtrip.

On April 6th 2013 from 10-6pm, AC Arts and Light Square in Adelaide will be packed to the gills with geeks! Not just the usual electronics folks you often hear me go on about, but makers and tinkerers of all fabulous flavours: stitch&bitchers, bike recyclers (teehee), solar power junkies, blacksmiths, spinners&weavers, bush mechanics & engineering wizards… &… well, WHO KNOWS WHO! Suffice to say these are my very favourite sort of people, so I shall be an extremely happy bunny.

Right now we’re calling for makers, so please sign up to make sure you get to show off your smarts & help us to share the message. If you want to be part of making this inaugural event happen then please sign up as a volunteer.

For those who don’t know about Maker Faire… here’s a re-post from the Mini Maker Faire Adelaide blog (used with permission).

Disclaimer: I’m ‘online community wrangler’ for this fabulous extravaganza, so I have an extra vested interest in talking excitedly about it. Expect to hear about this via my own feeds, but for the full deets you’ll need to follow the official accounts twitter.com/MakerFaireADL & facebook.com/MakerFaireADL.

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A family-friendly festival of invention, creativity and resourcefulness, and a celebration of the Maker movement.

Maker Faire USA; photo by Mark Thomson

Maker Faire USA; photo by Mark Thomson

What is a Mini Maker Faire?

A Maker Faire is where makers of all kinds get together and show what they can do. Mini Maker Faire Adelaide will have all kinds of demonstrations from 3D printing to blacksmithing and knitting to digital fabrication and everything in between.

Maker Faires feature innovation and experimentation across the spectrum of science, engineering, art, performance and craft.

Maker Faire is part of a growing DIY local and global movement of people who look at things a little differently and who just might spark the next generation of scientists, engineers and makers.

Maker Faire USA; photo by Mark Thomson

Maker Faire USA; photo by Mark Thomson

What is a Maker?

Makers work in their sheds, backyards, on their kitchen tables, in workshops and clubs, blending old DIY craft and trade skills and hobbies with the new world of digital manufacturing and robotics.

Makers share their knowledge and skills they gain at events such as Maker Faires. They want to get other people excited about making and tinkering.

Maker Faire is free, it’s hand on and we want you to be part of it!

Maker Faire USA; photo by Mark Thomson

Maker Faire USA; photo by Mark Thomson

How can I be part of Adelaide Mini Maker Faire?

If you are a maker come and be part of a great day. Maker registrations close on Monday February 11th.

If you would like to be part of the team that makes the Mini Maker Faire happen you can be a sponsor/partner or volunteer.

If you are interesting in learning about making, getting hands-on in workshops, checking out demonstrations or just taking part in a great family-friendly event, put Saturday 6 April in your diary and make sure you keep up to date with the latest news via Facebook and Twitter.

on depression

It’s been a big, emotional day, reading about Aaron Swartz’ suicide and all the anger and blame being thrown around. Working with Elliott Bledsoe on this open letter to JSTOR has been a concerted effort to try to bring some light to the darkness. Who knows if this mission of ours will take flight, but it’s heartwarming to see the strength of support it’s raised in just a few hours.

It’s 5.30am now. I’ve been lying on my sofabed unable to sleep, reading yet more articles and opinions and softly letting the tears fall. I always feel guilty when I cry, like I don’t have the right to be sad over the loss of someone I didn’t really know. Hell I spent a lot of last year feeling like I didn’t have the right to mourn my friend James as much as I did; so many other people knew him far longer and far better than I. But emotions don’t work like that – especially grief.

I’ve been lying there thinking quietly to myself about what someone so smart, talented and respected must have been feeling so desperately on the inside that he just couldn’t hold on any more. And then I found a blog post he’d written about depression in 2007, called simply “Sick“.  Actually, he calls it “depressed mood”, suggesting it’s too much of a stigma for him to admit it could be any more than an erratic, adolescent mood swing. Perhaps he’s right to hold back. Perhaps, because of this post, one day someone will wrap me up in a nice little descriptor-box called “depressed” and consider me “appropriately labeled and processed: tick”.

Yes, this is where I stop talking about a young man I didn’t know and open up about myself. Because we don’t talk often enough, or openly enough, about the depression most of us feel ourselves. We are supposed to be big and strong, always sure-footed, never stumbling – or making sure to laugh it off when we do. “Don’t cry, there’s a big girl” and “Oh come on, harden the fuck up” are far more common words of ‘encouragement’ than anyone telling you “let it out, you just need a good cry” or you proudly declaring to your mom, teacher or peers “I only felt crap about half of this week; it’s getting better, look!”. Society fucks us over at every turn. We barely have time (or money) to breathe between work and sleep never mind having to buy/cook/eat a healthy meal, induce some fresh-air-and-exercise-based-endorphins or enjoy any kind of cultural quality of life. Where in the hell is ‘mindfulness’ supposed to get a look-in?!

There have been countless times in my life where I have been through varying degrees of depression, lasting from a couple of days to (if I’m really honest with myself) several years. I’ve never been clinically diagnosed with it, but there have been several occasions (more than I care to admit, even in this grand reveal) when I just wanted it all to go away. In the past I had spent years pushing people far away from me, thinking it was surely better for everyone if they didn’t have to see these cycles, didn’t have to become embroiled in my pain.

No, “pain” is the wrong word. When I drop, falling heavily off that metaphorical cliff, I don’t feel pain. I don’t feel anything. The numbness is unfathomable. Think of the enormity of the Australian outback, mix it with the weight and density of a black hole, throw in the loneliness of desperately needing (but completely denying yourself) any love and attention from another soul, and add an exhaustion the likes of which only olympian athletes should anticipate, and you might come close. You don’t even have yourself for company; the inwardly-focused vitriol is overwhelming even for the most hardy of hermits.

The cycle (for me anyway) eventually comes back to the recognition that “I have been through this before”. That sudden moment of realisation is like a blackout curtain dropping away. Suddenly you are in daylight so bright it hurts your eyes… which is good. No, really, I’m not being a masochist. It means I can FEEL SOMETHING AGAIN. I know then that it’s OK. Or that at least it is getting better which in itself lets me know that (if I’m careful and do the right things) it should continue to get better. This is possibly the most fragile stage; I know I will likely again stumble on the way out but that at each step I will be stronger. And then it’s just a matter of working my way back through to the exit – or rather, entrance.

Of course this is a fool’s confidence, the mind is the same astonishingly clever little bastard whether it’s negotiating some intricate exciting new deal or excruciatingly screwing you over from the inside-out. With age (and sadly, repetition) you get to notice the warning signs. If you’re smart – and lucky – you’ll learn to notice them in time to take some action, but more often than not you’ll notice them retrospectively. It might sound perverse, but I have come to realise that each collapse trains you for the next healing process. The yin & yang; you can’t have one without the other. Now that I’m nearing 40 I’ve finally learned that if I’m happy all the time then something is wrong. At that point I either change something to rebalance myself, or prepare for the worst and wait to take the impending nose-dive.

Everyone is different. For me, sometimes all I need to rebalance is to hide myself away and just be, quietly, with myself. Sometimes a few hours, sometimes a few days. Some days are legitimately… [oh wow, that was an interesting Freudian slip; like depression isn’t legitimate? anyway…]. Some days are overtaken with intense stress-migraines that force me into a darkened room and deny my addiction to brightly-lit screens. Other times I just can’t/don’t want to/downright refuse to be anywhere near other living beings, online or off. I’ve learned that it’s the way it has to be for the other parts of my brain/life to work as (arguably) well as they do. I’ve learned to listen to myself, watch for those signs, be mindful of my mental state’s needs in the way that other people count calories. Of course since my tendency is peaks and troughs I frequently ignore the sensible and keep charging ahead, running on no food or sleep and an overdose of adrenalin for weeks on end, leading to the inevitable crash and burn. But it’s OK, it’s a cycle, and like any good cycle you just have to get back on and keep those wheels a’turnin.

It’s only OK now, though, because I had a couple of good Psychologists (yes, I’ve been through therapy). I learned to give myself the permission to hibernate when I need to, and to be broken when I need to be. And I talk to people about it when I’m ready to face the world again. If I didn’t have such great friends – the ones who hear my silence and send quiet checkins, the ones who boost my confidence when it sags and the ones who slap me down when I’m getting too big for my boots – my life really wouldn’t be worth living. (Admittedly, couchsurfing with this has been interesting, especially over the crazy last year I’ve had. The more loud and public things have been on the outside, the more I have craved solitary recuperation. That’s not always easy to achieve while living in other peoples’ homes and I’m exceedingly grateful for the kindness and patience of my various hosts).

They say it’s especially hard for men to talk about how they feel. I thought about this a while ago and realised that I rarely ask male friends those same deep searching questions that I ask my female friends. As a teenage girl the idea of asking a boy “what are you thinking” would instantly label you ‘needy’. Society trains us to act in abnormal boxes; it’s no surprise that we feel like we don’t fit the older we get. There are fine lines and balances, of course, but we need to ask each other “RU OK?” far more often than we do. And we need to mean it when we ask and be bold enough to answer honestly ourselves, too. Stephen Fry has written about dealing with depression, even leading a documentary on the subject; the below letter has always stayed in the back of my mind. Melbourne author/comedian Ben Pobjie wrote a couple of years ago about his own struggles. It’s OK, it’s normal. We need to remember that.

letter from @stephenfry to “Crystal” on @neilgaiman‘s Twitter feed.

letter from @stephenfry to “Crystal” on @neilgaiman‘s Twitter feed (via Daily Mail).

I will say again, I don’t know this boy Aaron. But from everything I have read in the last 24hours, he was an incredibly smart, bold fella who threw himself deeply into challenging the things he felt were wrong with the world. I think I would have liked him a great deal if we had met in person and I’m increasingly sad that will now never happen. (He was also damnably cute. I probably would have had an embarrassing crush on him, so maybe not having met him is a good thing really). But mainly, since reading a random link from my Facebook feed yesterday morning and unravelling his path ever since, I have been marvelling at how he had almost invisibly affected my own life.

I feel genuinely sad that he is gone, mostly hurting at the thought of his internal struggle regardless of the friends, family, colleagues (and even a handful of powerful peers) who surrounded him. I also feel anger that anyone (least of all a body charged with caretaking its people) would even vaguely desire to make another person feel threatened at all. I feel many things, and observing this lack of numbness reminds me, selfishly, that I am doing OK, most of the time, and that is a Good Thing. It also reminds me that I need to keep paying attention, both to myself and to the people around me.

So if the next time we meet and I look you deep in the eyes and say ‘so how are you doing, I mean REALLY?” don’t humour me and brush me off with an “Oh I’m fine”. Tell me. I don’t care if you’re male or female. Tell me that you’re broke and hate your job and don’t know where to turn with the great unknowns that loom. Tell me you miss the friend who died ten years ago and you just want to know when the longing ends. Tell me that sometimes you just don’t fucking feel anything. And we can talk about it for a while, and cry deeply and passionately into our cups of tea before going back to laughing about the latest meme that we saw on the internet. Then we should note that our meme was probably first posted on reddit, shared to via RSS and which we could read openly on an internet that hadn’t been locked down by SOPA legislation (yet), thanks to a great deal of Aaron’s astonishingly generous talents).

But it won’t end there, because by then I will have become part of your world too. When I stumble, you’ll catch me and ask me the same question. Because those are the type of people I want to call ‘my society’. People who care about one another not just themselves. People who aren’t scared of saying “I’m not feeling anything anymore; help”. Maybe, one day, you too can be in the same position. If so, I hope I’ve done something to help. RIP Aaron, and thanks x

NB: If you’re struggling and don’t have friends/family to talk to (or would prefer to talk to a stranger), try calling Lifeline (13 11 14), Beyond Blue (1300 22 4636) or one of the many other services they link to through their sites. Don’t suffer alone x
UPDATE: Please take the time to read and (if you agree with) share/sign our open-letter to JSTOR.

An open letter to the publishers of JSTOR

Below is a letter co-signed by Elliott Bledsoe and I sent to the President and JSTOR Managing Director at JSTOR’s publisher ITHAKA, encouraging them to name their free accounts in memoriam of Aaron Swartz. Elliott and I are encouraging like-minded people to join us in this call. Please read the letter. If you support the idea, please add your name as a co-signatory in the comments here or on the duplicate post on elliottbledsoe.com. I encourage you to also read Elliott’s earlier post Aaron Swartz, death of a console cowboy and my own post on depression. Please feel free to share these links with other like-minded people.

 

Kevin M. Guthrie, President and
Laura Brown, Executive Vice President and JSTOR Managing Director
ITHAKA
2 Rector Street, 18th Floor
New York, NY 10006

 

 

Dear Mr Kevin Guthrie and Ms Laura Brown

 

We join you in expressing our condolences to the family and friends of Aaron Swartz. It is a tragic loss, the extent of which can never be fully realised.

 

We thank ITHAKA for their decision not to pursue Aaron for his actions involving the JSTOR archive in July 2011. In particular, we respect and support your decision to be public about ITHAKA’s decision. If only all the parties involved had been so up-front about where they stand. We, like many others, believe the United States Attorney’s Office has been over zealous in their pursuit of the matter, and this has had a devastating effect on a man’s life. Copyright should not kill.

 

As advocates of open access to knowledge, we also applaud your recent decision to introduce free accounts for all users. The recently introduced Register & Read program is an excellent way of encouraging and supporting life-long learning regardless of affiliation with a higher education institution. Moreover it strengthens the ways the organisation delivers on it’s aim to help people discover, use, and build upon the wide range of content held in your database. We strongly support the notion that academic endeavours funded by the public purse should be available to everyone to access and enjoy.

 

We write to you to make a simple but timely suggestion: name your free accounts in memoriam of Aaron Swartz.

 

The idea started as a comment on social media, but the more we discussed it the more we saw strength in simplicity. Such a gesture would be a significant vote of confidence in the causes Aaron stood for, and a lasting tribute to Aaron himself. Such a positive public move would help to draw into question the victimisation of Aaron and the attempt to besmirch his name and reputation by the United States Attorney’s Office. It is not our place to decide the il/legality of Aaron’s actions on that day in July 2011, but as advocates of access to knowledge, we cannot sit by and let Aaron’s memory and the culmination of his life’s work become a shadow that discourages brilliant minds from furthering similar pursuits.

 

What would be a simple thing to implement for ITHAKA would have powerful resonance in a community coming to terms with this tragic loss.

 

With regards

 

 

 

Fee Plumley & Elliott Bledsoe
and the co-signatories listed in the comments below

Haecksen Mini Conf at Linux 2013

Really excited to announce that not only am I attending my first Linux Conf in Canberra at the end of the month, but I’m also going to be speaking there! Haecksen are the women-in-FLOSS community and regularly run networking events to help women in open technology gather.

My talk is on Open Source Cities and is at 1.45pm on Tuesday  29th January. It’s about an idea I’m developing around notions of place and the city as they relate to technology & creative culture. The blurb goes like this:

My Open Source Cities exploration is around how the concept of “the city” has changed since the massive (but not yet ubiquitous) uptake of the internet. More specifically, I want to examine if and how Australia’s new National Broadband Network will change how Australians live, work, and perceive themselves and each other. The open source community have (with permission) taken hardware or software designed by others and (with permission) tweaked or reused those innovations for their own purposes. I believe that Nomadic and decentralised communities can function as (or possibly, more) effectively than many urban constructs if only the innovations developed locally were shared across larger distances. I aim to explore, and hopefully prove, this on my travels. This talk will present some of the key areas where I’m seeking feedback and discussion at the start of these explorations. Please come expecting crowdsourcing triggers and open discussion as opposed to receiving quantitative solutions!

Come along if you’re in Canberra, or message me if this is something you’re interested in chatting through or watching develop.

I’m able to attend the conference thanks to Kylie Willison & the FOSS Connect program who are supplying money to go toward fuel for the bus :)

Follow #LCA2013 proceedings – on Facebookon Twitter,  on Identica or via the #linux.conf.au channel on irc.freenode.net.

UPDATE: I should be specific and say I’m speaking at the Haecksen Mini-conf, not Linux Conf… there’s a difference :)

UPDATE2: You can watch a recording of my (somewhat scatty) first presentation of my nomadic creative culture research here. You may note it became much less about my original proposal, but hey… that’s research for ya!

Maiden Voyage: the good, the bad & the ouch

Well… I *said* this would be a learning curve, but Oh My. I promised to be public about what I do and how it goes – including the bad – so here ya go. (Warning: contains sad news).

The good

  • I’ve started my journey, finally, and it’s already been an adventure… I’ve driven over 1500kms and I’ve barely even started.
  • The landscape has been stunning; I’ve seen kangaroos, wallabies, possums, kookaburras, emus, lizards, a scorpion and (I think?) a porcupine!
  • I’ve caught up with old friends and made new ones.
  • I’ve been given an awning from the gorgeous folks at Milkwood Permaculture Farm! Not only does that save me approx $2,500 it also means the oh-so-vital shade is closer than I’d thought (tho it currently takes up half the bed area until I can fit it onto the outside of the bus).
  • “Home, James” is an incredible size as living accommodation. I’ve stayed in a few campervans before, but when she’s finished she’ll be total luxury as a home.
  • It’s 2013! The biggest and most exciting year of my life!
my first trip route

my first trip route

The bad

  • Worst news first: You know that GORGEOUS paint job we just finished doing before xmas? Well… I’ve scraped her :( I’m heartbroken, ashamed and cross with myself. It was bound to happen sooner or later, but it happened on DAY THREE, ffs… far too soon. And it’s also pretty bad, there’s a decent dent and some of the paint work has gone back to metal. I would quite honestly have preferred to have done that kind of damage to my own skin than hers. I’ve spent the last few days feeling SHITTY about this, so much so I haven’t been able to say anything publicly until now. I let Jimmy (who sold her to me and helped me get her all gorgeous on the outside) know yesterday and am on my way to Sydney so I feel like I need to admit this before anyone else meets her. I know – and have been repetitively told (thanks guys) – that ‘shit happens’ and ‘it won’t be the last’ (!). I’m trying to feel better about it, but it’s not only really disappointing it’s severely knocked my confidence driving her. I’m was always nervous of driving such a big thing, but now I’m basically paranoid at every narrow track and turning. Buggerations :(
scrape :(

scrape :(

  • Secondly, I’ve owned old vehicles before (in fact I’ve never owned a new one); I know how you’re supposed to ease them in between owners. She’s been a school bus since 1994, only going reasonably short distances. My original plan was to take her out on some little trips around SA to learn how she drives and build her up to longhaul. But, because I’m an idiot, I got over-excited about my friend’s 40th birthday at their stunning permaculture farm near Mudgee in regional NSW. I was later than expected picking up the bus, and over-confident in thinking I could travel nearly 1500kms in 3 days (especially when the first one was only a short drive so I could set up home on New Year’s Eve). She drives beautifully, even though she’s a very old engine. She didn’t deserve to be thrashed about, driving 700-900kms a day, up/down extremely steep hills and along very windy, gritty tracks. She’s been guzzling oil and (since the temperature gauge doesn’t work!) I’m having to keep a very close eye on her coolant levels. Damn me and my overzealousness.
  • Thirdly, I spotted yesterday that one of the rear light covers has come off. I’m not sure when, maybe from all the bone-shaking tracks I was driving on this week, maybe I clipped something else that I didn’t even notice. Either way she looks pretty forlorn right now, as does her numpty-owner.

The lessons

  • My bus is a 22seater Toyota Coaster. It’s the biggest you can drive on a normal licence, providing her total weight stays below 4.5tonnes. I thought the bus drivers course/licence was too expensive and that I could get away without one. This was a serious false economy. In retrospect it seems so obvious, but learning to drive a bus properly would have been a really bloody good idea.
  • Make sure you have a seriously smart & generous support network. I have fortunately had this and have been making very good use of them. When I have had electricity (which isn’t often) I’ve been able to bleat my concerns and get serious advice from Kim Hawtin (of Adelaide Techmeet) and Andrew Lamb & Caswal Parker (whom I first met on a crowdfunding panel at Freeplay Independent Games Festival because they made a game about engines called “Automation“). I’ve also been able to query Hackerspace Adelaide about my issues with a 24v-12v converter (more on that another time). Thank fuck for all of them!
  • Give yourself time. We are both old ladies, this bus & me. Driving 700-900kms a day is far too stressful for both of us; I need to build in time for several days of 300/400kms instead.
  • Given I’m attempting to go for free parking wherever possible, I need to spend time planning where I’m going and arrive early enough that there be a space available. The old-school Fee ‘head off whenever and see what happens when I get there’ really isn’t smart anymore. I haven’t got myself into trouble, but I can see that I easily could, especially in busy holiday seasons & considering tricky manoeuvring is tricky!
  • I really really need my solar rig. I brought my cig lighter-usb dongle, thinking that’d give me enough power to charge my phone, at least. But I forgot I’m on a 24v system. I bought a 12-24v converter, but it’s seemingly not happy with my phone, so until I find a hack I’ve got no power unless I charge up at places I stop over (another reason for not driving all day – makes it hard to find time to stop for several hours to charge things).
  • One benefit of being forced offline is that it’s really good for me to be offline sometimes! I forget that disconnection is a choice. This is re-programming me to not check the phone every ten minutes (yes sometimes it’s that bad) to see if I have a new email/social message. This is great. But having a device for navigation and emergencies is also important, so there has to be a balance.

All in all, it’s been great. The scrape is gutting, the engine toll is slightly concerning, but the living space is awesome and the awning will only make that better. I am now taking the driving a lot slower and spending more time thinking about destinations in advance. Next stop = Sydney where I will be showing her off with slightly less pride than a week ago, but she will glow regardless. If any of you see her, please do me a vain favour and only take pics from the passenger door side??

Finally, some pretty photos

I posted my NYE location shots in the last post. Here are a couple of my fave other shots from the week so far… For more, follow me on Instagram, Flickr or Twitter

Scottish Thistle @Milkwood Farm

Scottish Thistle @Milkwood Farm

 

Home, James @Milkwood Farm

Home, James @Milkwood Farm