
A life-size fire-breathing dragon. A fully robotic calliope band. A full-scale flight simulator
built by teenagers. An entire herd of homemade R2-D2s. Electric cars, steampunk fashion, a robot petting zoo, a piano made of bananas, and a cardboard Trojan Horse. Plus a zillion different interactive attractions, classes, and events for kids of all ages. Yes, the
Maker Faire is back in town, and only just in time. It was exactly the tonic I needed after my
inability to get excited about the Facebook IPO and my ongoing sense that most of the Valley is focused on building meaningless mobile/social/local/scrapbooking
sugar water. This was a place full of people building real, tangible things for the sake of sheer awesomeness. Oh--and while they're at it, almost as a side effect, hidden behind their Burning-Man-esque decor is a community and technology ready to turn the whole planet on its ear. The maker movement has hit an interesting flux point; its amateurs and enthusiasts, much like the computer geeks of the 1970s and 1980s, now stand on the verge of watching their hobby erupt into big business that will reshape the way people everywhere live. Do I sound hyperbolic? Don't just take my word for it; listen to the mighty
Economist, which in its British understated fashion recently called digital manufacturing no less than "
The third industrial revolution."
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