[Noisebridge-discuss] State of the dirty workshop

Jake jake at spaz.org
Mon Jan 14 21:58:49 UTC 2013


you speak of Monad, who is a noisebridge Member (i think) and a really 
great person.  He made the hanging toothpick sculptures, came to Toorcamp 
with his son (also a cool guy) and helped repair the bus so it could 
return from toorcamp.

He also repaired the electric door latch the first time the door got 
kicked in (that is my theory of what happened to it) by Chris (that's who 
i think did it and kept doing it).

Monad is great, and i'm glad he's working on the shop.

-jake

On Mon, 14 Jan 2013, jim wrote:

>
>
>    There's a new hero in sawdust-town: Monok or some
> such. I suspect he's too smart and/or busy to read the
> NB discuss list. I talked with him a couple of times
> on Sunday. I'm gonna try to be a welcoming supporter.
>    He pretty much acknowledges the practical sides
> of things. I think his story would be that he's just
> starting and doesn't expect miracles.
>    I told him to hide the routers and he seemed
> surprised, then I think he got my point: don't make
> really dangerous tools easily available to the
> adventurous and inexperienced.
>
>    I'm pretty sure he'll welcome any improvements
> that anyone else makes. I'm hoping I get around to
> putting up a sign on the east pegboard (which he
> bought himself) that says "Screwdrivers" and that
> I put hanger thingies for every single screwdriver
> that's in there (or should be). I think hammers might
> be a good candidate for hanging on pegboard (not in
> a mislabeled drawer). Also everything that has to do
> with measuring--pencils, levels, right-angles...
> seems good on the pegboard all on the east wall.
> Saws seem good on the north wall pegboard.
>
>    A sign with a list of things people can donate
> will be good. Like #1, #2, and #3 philips screwdrivers,
> hacksaw blades, sand paper, drill chuck keys....
> Probably good to include a note not to donate
> expensive stuff: cheap drills work till they break,
> expensive drills work till they walk.
>
>    Put the exotic and dangerous tools in an obscure
> and unlabeled place.
>    Don't put all the motorized tools together; put
> drills near screwdrivers, sanders near sandpaper...
> (don't worry that drills are for drilling as well as
> for screwdriving--make a stand and to hell with logic).
>
>    I told Monok that the most important thing is the
> appearance of order, not an approach to perfect
> category relationships. He nodded, either agreeing
> or bored.
>
>    We are and probably always will be in the lowest
> level of the Capability Maturity Model (CMM): chaos
> and heroism. I say embrace it; good if the occasional
> heros know of each other supportively .
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, 2013-01-14 at 11:14 -0800, Jake wrote:
>> bump
>>
>> i agree with everything you said.  I think that sometimes, shops or work
>> areas get "cleaned up" or "organized" by people who don't know what those
>> areas are for and while some might say it's better than leaving it a mess,
>> i disagree.
>>
>> I think it basically comes down to people who don't have anything to do,
>> and are at noisebridge for the wrong reasons, decide to get involved.  And
>> i would like to also blame them for the missing tools but i'm sure entropy
>> has a lot to do with it.
>>
>> We should make a shopping list of missing tools and parts (you just
>> started one) and keep it in a wiki.  We can put a sign on the wall in the
>> shop linking people to that list, so they can check to see if what they're
>> looking for is on the "missing" list or not before wasting time searching
>> for it.
>>
>> and i'm in agreement that we should consider infrastructure for non-public
>> tool storage with shareable access credentials (combo lock) so that we Can
>> Have Nice Things.
>>
>> Although i would prefer to systematically improve the ratio of
>> anti-entropic people to entropic people who spend time at noisebridge.
>>
>> -jake
>>
>> Jim wrote:
>>
>>      Now that I've tried to work in it, the feeling
>> is that it was organized by someone who didn't
>> know about tools.
>> * The hammers are in a drawer labeled "wrenches",
>>    which should be re-labeled "wrenches, hammers,
>>    pounders, garden tools, and vacuum cleaner parts".
>> * There are no #1 or #2 or #3 philips screwdrivers.
>>    There are a couple of >3 philips screwdrivers.
>> * Best I can see there are no chuck keys for any
>>    of the (remaining, low-quality) electric drills.
>> * There are probably a lot of drill bits in there,
>>    but I haven't found them.
>> * hacksaws have no blades.
>>
>>      I think the model of having useful, good tools
>> available for anyone who saunters in to do stuff
>> is proven failed.
>>      I like the model of a few heavy, hard-to-move
>> power tools along with some cheap, manual hand tools.
>>      I also like the model of sub-communities, groups
>> of a few people with shared interests that can lock
>> their good tools in some lockable bin that is theirs
>> and sits in the dirty shop. Or in some other place,
>> not a member shelf.
>>
>>
>>
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>
>



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