@Andrew

Are you saying I get a *patient* if I start the funding part of a new
product/invention process?

Sign me up for a Hawking clone, please.

This will be so cool!


On Thu, Nov 28, 2013 at 12:35 AM, alex kot <[email protected]> wrote:

> I bought a Starter Kit made by OSEPP from microcenter, not as cool as the
> one Torrie showed from SparkFun.  I know Microcenter sells SparkFun
> products, but I am not sure if they have the one she listed yet.  Might
> stop by next time when I am at work (Microcenter is up in Cleveland).
>
>
>   On Thursday, November 28, 2013 12:28 AM, Andrew Buczko <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>  "prototyping kit for a brand new inventor"
> The kit Torrie suggested looks great, and would be nice to
> have available at SynHak.
>
> When people ask about how to invent something, I like to talk to them
> about Starting their own business with the thing that they want to invent.
> Since you need to find some way to pay for everything that goes with
> getting a patient. There are a lot of things that people don't think about
> :)
>
> Hmm, I really need some free time so that I can write a talk about it.
> Andy
>
> PS, you can also contact the Hudson inventors group for suggestions too.
>
>
> On Wed, Nov 27, 2013 at 10:21 PM, Torrie Fischer <[email protected]
> > wrote:
>
> On Wednesday, November 27, 2013 13:59:55 Pierce wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > Could I ask for an opinion from anyone who has a few minutes & feels like
> > weighing in?
> >
> >          If I was trying to put together a prototyping kit for a brand
> new
> > inventor, what would go into it?
> >
> > Goals:
> > A really wide range of possible inventions.
> > Functional, as well as representative, stuff, not *just* 'model of'
> stuff.
> > A bunny slope learning curve.
> > An exciting, real, substantive feel.
> > Access to many different disciplines (mechanical, electrical, robotic,
> > programming, crafty, modern material marvels, etc.?) of making and an
> > encouragement to fuzz those lines!
> > Ideal for a systems approach or big picture thinking approach to
> invention.
> >
> >
> > Two cost types:
> > 1.) the skies the limit
> > &
> > 2.)  $100 or $200 for two dozen inventors to take turns, in teams, for
> many
> > dismantle-n-rebuild real inventions.
> >
> > I've given this bunches of thought but I would like to hear from other
> > people with different ideas.  If this is the wrong forum for this big a
> > question, feel free to delete and respond with the appropriate
> > e-chastisement.
>
> You might be looking for the Sparkfun Inventor's Kit as a source of
> inspiration for electronics:
>
> https://www.sparkfun.com/products/11576
>
> Its only $90 and would easily cover everything about electronics,
> programming,
> and a touch of robotics. I'm not sure for the other bits though.
>
> >
> > Thanks for everything and hello to all from Steph,
> > (One of the new persons, with brown hair, who's been visiting lately.)
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