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How and why I built the DOGMAS project, a self contained Morse code reader in the form of a candle.
over a year ago

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More from Blog - Mac Pierce

An (overbuilt) 10" mini rack for a LAN Party

Plans, files, and BOM to build your own 10” mini rack using T-slot extrusion and 3D prints.

2 weeks ago 17 votes
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The process of making an single purpose art PC that uses an aluminum casting as the radiator for a water-cooling loop.

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A review of the group show Minionotics (March 13th - April 13th, 2025) at Weatherproof Gallery in Chicago.

4 months ago 42 votes
NCCCIAP 2025 - Photos +

A photo gallery showcasing images taken at the 2025 National Conference on Contemporary Cast Iron Art and Practices.

4 months ago 50 votes
Fort Emplacements and FDM: making Castle Doctrine

How I made Castle Doctrine, a 1:1 scale fully 3D-Printed American Revolutionary War era cannon.

over a year ago 99 votes

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Job churn

Since I was born, humans have created 6 billion jobs. All while technology relentlessly disrupts existing industries. The pin making machine replaced the hand-crafted pin. The ox-pulled plow replaced millions of hours of backbreaking work. The amplification and electronic distribution of music upended the work of the live musician, and the camera replaced countless portrait […]

22 hours ago 3 votes
Take a Virtual Tour of Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre in London

The story of the Globe Theatre, the ancestral home of Shakespeare’s plays, is itself very Shakespearean, in all of the ways we use that adjective: it has deep roots in English history, a tragic backstory, and represents all of the hodgepodge of London, in the early 17th century and today, with the city’s colorful street […]

21 hours ago 3 votes
“GET OUTTA MY WAY”

Pedestrian traffic in Grand Central Station is a bit of a miracle. Thousands of people, all walking quickly, in almost non-Euclidian chaos, headed toward different trains. And no one collides. We see the same thing at a more dangerous clip when a four lane highway merges. The cars are just a few feet apart (or […]

2 days ago 5 votes
Gustave Doré’s Haunting Illustrations of Dante’s Divine Comedy

Inferno, Canto X: Many artists have attempted to illustrate Dante Alighieri’s epic poem the Divine Comedy, but none have made such an indelible stamp on our collective imagination as the Frenchman Gustave Doré. Doré was 23 years old in 1855, when he first decided to create a series of engravings for a deluxe edition of […]

4 days ago 7 votes
The violinist problem

Two hundred years ago, there were a lot of violinists. Many made a living at it. If you were of means and wanted to hear music, your best option was to hire someone to play it for you. Of course, the invention of the phonograph and the radio changed all of that. Now, one great […]

5 days ago 8 votes