March 12, 2007 4:00 AM PDT

SXSW sets stage for open-source DIY hacking

AUSTIN, Texas--If you went to the keynote speech at the South by Southwest Interactive Festival here Sunday and found your cell phone not working, it wasn't your carrier's fault.

You can blame the SXSWi keynote speakers, Make magazine Senior Editor Phil Torrone and do-it-yourself electronics pioneer Limor Fried. During their on-stage conversation, the pranksters took the opportunity to show how to jam cell phone signals.

To demonstrate, they showed a spectrum analyzer measuring cellular activity in the immediate area. Torrone asked someone in the audience to call him and then turned on a homemade jammer. The analyzer's graph went haywire, and the call made to Torrone was dropped.

Cell phone jamming was but a small sample of the types of hacking the pair described at SXSWi this weekend. Torrone and Fried hope to usher in a new Golden Age of hardware hacking by inventing new techniques, documenting them and publishing the full details.

"We're working on open-source hardware," Fried explained to the packed room, "and how we can take the paradigm of open-source software and make things out of it."

"Why would I make a shirt out of computer fans if it didn't work?"
--Make magazine editor Phil Torrone

In addition to the jamming technology, Torrone and Fried discussed and illustrated several of their favorite DIY hardware hacks, including a monocycle, which is a motorcycle with one wheel; a bacon alarm clock, which wakes its owner to the smell of bacon; and a shirt made from computer fans to help its wearer stay cool at Burning Man.

"People ask (Torrone) if it works," Fried explained, "and he said, 'Why would I make a shirt out of computer fans if it didn't work?'"

Torrone also talked about an innovative team from New York University's Interactive Telecommunications Program who took a plant and embedded it with open-source technology and a telephony system, so it could send a voice mail when it needed to be watered.

Another lauded project was Trolltech's Qtopia Greenphone, a mobile phone that runs Linux and has an available software development platform.

"What these projects have in common is that people are sharing the recipes," Torrone said, "and it's starting to fall under (a) category, which is open-source hardware."

Fried said the concept involved several levels of technology, the foundation being basic mechanics. She said that kind of information can be publicly released under a Creative Commons license, and she hoped more people would begin using open-source computer-aided design to create such projects.

The next level up, Fried explained, is circuit board design, and the one above that is firmware. These levels can be released under general public licenses or BSD licenses.

"On the side, as well as releasing all the schematics," Fried said, "you also want to release all the data sheets and parts lists so (people) can figure out where to get the parts."

The top levels are software and open APIs (application programming interfaces), which led Torrone to discuss the DIY hacking being done on Roombas. He pointed out that the vacuum's manufacturer, iRobot, hasn't publicly released the firmware but has opened up the API.

CONTINUED: Robot games...
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See more CNET content tagged:
DIY, hacking, API, open source, firmware

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 10 comments
LAME
by Andronicus March 12, 2007 6:35 AM PDT
This has to be the lamest news artical of all times.

Cellphone jamming is not "Technology". It is old news, and ILLIGAL. It is theft! The Cell phone user has paid leased the radio frequency, and by jamming it, you are stealing.
Reply to this comment
LAME
by Andronicus March 12, 2007 6:35 AM PDT
This has to be the lamest news artical of all times.

Cellphone jamming is not "Technology". It is old news, and ILLIGAL. It is theft! The Cell phone user has paid leased the radio frequency, and by jamming it, you are stealing.
Reply to this comment
A person's right to do as he please affect another person's rights.
by pjianwei March 12, 2007 6:48 AM PDT
Whose right is more important?
Reply to this comment
A person's right to do as he please affect another person's rights.
by pjianwei March 12, 2007 6:48 AM PDT
Whose right is more important?
Reply to this comment
MAKE is NOT the first magazine devoted to DIY technology projects
by rsmith187 March 12, 2007 7:35 AM PDT
Gimme a break. In the 70's and 80's there was Radio-Electronics, Popular Electronics, and many more magazines devoted to DIY technology. We were building our own robots and hovercraft in the late 70's with plans out of these magazines.
Reply to this comment View reply
MAKE is NOT the first magazine devoted to DIY technology projects
by rsmith187 March 12, 2007 7:35 AM PDT
Gimme a break. In the 70's and 80's there was Radio-Electronics, Popular Electronics, and many more magazines devoted to DIY technology. We were building our own robots and hovercraft in the late 70's with plans out of these magazines.
Reply to this comment View reply
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