DIY ethos fuels the Maker movement
Inventors, tinkerers and creative people of all ages at SoCal Maker Con at the Pomona Fairplex explain what being part of the technology-based DIY culture means to them.
Tinkerers of all ages gathered last weekend at SoCal Maker Con, a convention for “makers.”
Makers are hobbyists, entrepreneurs and inventors. The “Maker Movement” is a subculture that started about 10 years ago with its own magazines, blogs and conventions that emphasize social learning through doing.
Makers turn common objects like PVC piping into motion controllers for their video games. They build just for the sake of building and learning how things work.
Convention goers at the Pomona Fairplex watched drone demonstrations and battling robots, and walked through a “start-up alley,” where developers looking for crowdfunding displayed their products and services.