Make-a-thon

This week we got an introduction to the Make-a-thon. The participants of this event go beyond our Digital Making seminar course. Its expanded to Industrial design students from Dr. Deana McDonagh and Jim Kendall’s course, as well as students from Jeff Ginger’s Makerspace. This pre-event to the actual Make-a-thon gave us a general overview of what was going to take place leading up to the weekend long event. Later during the session there was a panel of a few returning experts and a few new ones. Some new faces were Isaac, John, and Steve. They all spoke about their disabilities and the daily frustrations they face. The panel even discussed some of the unique ways they’ve adapted to make the best of their situations.

John’s sock with three attached loops
Joh’s sock with three attached loops

Above is an image of one of John’s sock. I thought this was so simple, yet very effective. Apart of John’s condition is very minimal grip strength. So task like putting on socks or buttoning a shirt is difficult to him. A simple life hack he came up with was sewing loops on the outer edge of his sock, which he can fit around his fingers and pull on the sock. It crazy to think this is all it took and it making a huge difference.

Steve from the panel also gave us an overview of Clark Lindsey, which is a  premier retirement community for today’s accomplished adults. From the presentation he gave I found there to be quite some opportunity in this specific sector. He put a heavy emphasis on fall prevention. Maybe we can design some sort of new innovative thing around this opportunity.

The last part of the Make-a-thon pre-event was a social portion. This time was for everyone to meet and talk amongst each other. Since we’ve been working on our project for sometime  used this portion to to talk with some of the new experts and students to see if any wanted to get involved. We did meet a potential new team member from Jeff’s makerspace seminar. She seemed very interested in what it was Solestice is trying to do. After this It really just turned into a team meeting where we mapped out what we needed to from the session up until the Make-a-thon itself.


Pre Make-a-thon

For once, this week’s class did not involve waking up for 9am class! The lecture was moved to Tuesday night as we gathered with 3 different classes and officially announced the kickoff of the Make-a-Thon event. The room was buzzing with excitement from the other students, but definitely filled with some overwhelm and stress from peers in 357. We’re finally going to have to make a final prototype within 2 weeks from today.

At this point, we have more or less settled on a concrete strategy. We will use inspiration from current joystick cover solutions to create a lower cost product. Most of the market is saturated with products which end up costing well over $60 when accounting for tax. The disabled community is already one of the lowest earning demographics, and it makes no sense to monetize of a disability, so we are keen to undercut the market and steal market share from overpriced competitors.

We will need materials help during the make-a-thon. Thankfully we have a designer and a coder so simple software solutions will be able to be easily implemented. However, the most pressing question is which filament is malleable enough to make a joystick cover? It needs to be able to resist water, fold and wrap around the arm of the chair.

Make-a-thon is bound to leave us with some marvelous experiences and I’m excited to finally bring our concept to life.