Make Magazine eBooks on Humble Bundle again. Great for the DIY or anyone interested in getting into electronics:
Pay $1 or more!
- Make: Paper Inventions
- Best of Make: Volume 2: 65 Projects and Skill Builders from the Pages of Make:
- Make: Design for 3D Printing
- Make: Technology on Your Time Volume 42: 3D Printer Buyer's Guide
- Make: 3D Printing: The Essential Guide to 3D Printers
- Make: Zero to Maker: Learn (Just Enough) to Make (Just About) Anything
- Make: Technology on Your Time Volume 44: Fun with Drones!
- Make: Making Simple Robots
- Make: DIY Comms and Control for Amateur Space: Talking and Listening to Your Satellite
Pay $8 or more to also unlock!
- Make: The Annotated Build-It-Yourself Science LaboratoryMake: The Annotated Build-It-Yourself Science Laboratory
- The Makerspace Workbench: Tools, Technologies, and Techniques for MakingThe Makerspace Workbench: Tools, Technologies, and * Techniques for Making
- Make: Technology on Your Time Volume 41: Best Toys for MakersMake: Technology on Your Time Volume 41: Best Toys for Makers
- Make: Getting Started with Processing, 2nd EditionMake: Getting Started with Processing, 2nd Edition
- Make: Getting Started with Arduino, 3rd EditionMake: Getting Started with Arduino, 3rd Edition
- Make: Technology on Your Time Volume 47: The Space IssueMake: Technology on Your Time Volume 47: The Space Issue
- More books coming soon!More books coming soon!
Pay $15 or more to also unlock!
- Make: Tinkering, 2nd Edition
- Getting Started with Sensors: Measure the World with Electronics, Arduino, and Raspberry PiGetting Started with Sensors: * Measure the World with Electronics, Arduino, and Raspberry Pi
- Make: Edible InventionsMake: Edible Inventions
- Make: Getting Started with CNC
- Make: Make It GlowMake: Make It Glow
- Make: Family Projects for Smart ObjectsMake: Family Projects for Smart Objects
- Make: Getting Started with Raspberry Pi, 3rd EditionMake: Getting Started with Raspberry Pi, 3rd Edition
Can anybody comment on the quality of these eBooks, especially for a learner?
I have a Raspberry Pi and am interested in eventually being able to use it to control motors to create moving parts for cosplay, as well as lights & sounds, I know there are lots of online resources, and I have signed up to several free Udemy courses on the programming side (thanks OzB!).