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Finding Your Way with GPS
If you’ve been thinking of building around GPS, you’ve picked a good time to get started.

Behold, The Noodle Copter!
A quadcopter made from pool noodles. Surprisingly practical and good looking (from a distance)!

Calling Out Around the World: Low-cost Global Satellite Signaling with Iridium
Use the Iridium satellite network to communicate with your projects anywhere they can see the sky.

Kombucha Madness
Brew a cup of this popular "tea of immortality," and enjoy its healthy, fermented zing. A flashback from the pages of CRAFT.

Try a Triac
Try these clever off-label uses for an underappreciated component. There are billions of triacs in the world. In almost every lamp dimmer, every electric stove, and many motor controllers, power is moderated by a triac clipping a portion of each positive and negative AC pulse.

Building an Ornithopter
Can humans fly by flapping? Nope. But they can build a small, rubber band-powered ornithopter whose motion is similar to a bird in flight. Here's how! A classic project from William Gurstelle from the pages of MAKE Volume 08.

Make Your Own D*mn Board – Part 2: Routing
We're learning how to use EAGLE by stepping through the design process for a basic Arduino-type AVR microcontroller development board, specifically the Really Bare Bones Board design by Paul Badger of Modern Device. In Part 1, we showed you how to lay out the schematic and validate it with EAGLE's built-in Electrical Rule Check. Here we'll show you how to establish the physical shape of the board and the actual copper pathways that make up the real circuit.

TV-B-Gone Kit
Tired of all those LCD TVs everywhere?

Remote Control Snowblower
With the right parts list and a simple plan, you can have this built in just eight hours for under $1,000.

Primer — Soldering and Desoldering
Step-by-step instructions for making (and unmaking) the perfect solder joint.

How to Use LEDs to Detect Light
Since an electromagnetic telephone receiver can double as a microphone, can a semiconductor light emitting diode (LED) double as a light detector?

CNC Air Raid Siren
It’s loud, annoying, and fun — cut out the parts on a CNC router, then motorize them with a cheapo bench grinder (we found the perfect one at Harbor Freight). A great CNC project from MAKE fabricator Dan Spangler, designed with a traditional 5/6 two-tone sound ratio like the classic World War II sirens. WEEEEEEEEEEEOOOH!