hoi zäme,
On Thursday, October 15, 2015 at 7:31:01 PM UTC+8, Ujjwal Thaakar wrote:
-- nice to see more connections starting inside the indian sub-continent. in fact i think there is already 100s of interesting activities going on there. just they seem to be not on this list. there is a not-so-active facebook group for biohackers in blr.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/225970144243550/
i personally have only been involved in the scene in bangalore, the art(sci) BLR hosted at the srishti school, and strong collaborations with NCBS. who is also very interested in such citizen science and low-cost equipment initiatives.
http://hackteria.org/projects/news/dusjagrs-residency-at-artscienceblr/
since the foundation of hackteria we have been very active in india, yashas shetty the co-founder spent years of doing workshops, building low-cost equipment and doing poetic works at the art/sci interface presented at iGEM 2009-2012.
http://hackteria.org/media/brochures-by-the-artscience-blr/
meanwhile we are more other interested in interdisciplinary education projects around citizen science:
http://biodesign.cc/category/where/india/
we hosted a hackteriaLab in blr in 2013:
http://hackteria.org/hackterialab/hackterialab-2013-bangalore/
some of my friends started this in 2013.. but it changed a bit recently
http://ternup.com/
during an earlier workshop in collaboration with jaaga here:
http://hackteria.org/workshops/hackteria-distillery-juuga-bangalore/
they now have a hacker-farm, bridging ecology/sustainability and the hardware/start-up scene
Talking about centrifuges, i keep telling my definition of a centrifuge: "it's primarily a strong heavy box" just to make sure that stuff doesnt fly around in you lab...
i am still scared to look at these images from our students in bangalore:
http://hackteria.org/wiki/DIY_handheld_centrifuge
we put together a large range of basic DIY crafted lab prototypes here, also check our recent Hard-disc centrifuge:
http://hackteria.org/wiki/Generic_Lab_Equipment
greetings from taipei!
m
On Thursday, October 15, 2015 at 7:31:01 PM UTC+8, Ujjwal Thaakar wrote:
Hi Ankit,
That's nice to know. We have a team here in Delhi which is also working on hardware. Let's have a chat about it.On Thu, 15 Oct 2015 at 4:56 PM, Ankit Chaturvedi <ankit.ch...@gmail.com> wrote:Hi Naresh,Although I'm a beginner in this domain, I'd surely love to help you in getting this started. I'm in Bangalore and know of a few people who have had similar ideas in the past but it never went anywhere. As Nathan mentioned, hillhacks would have good info on how to go about setting up a hackerspace. Another avenue to explore would be something similar to Workbench projects, although a lot of legwork would need to be done to get the proper equipment and tools. Perhaps a good start would be to compile to a list of equipment and allocate budget, a few starter projects, and as Ujjwal suggested creating awareness through workshops/talks/conferences. Cost of equipment would be prohibitive in India, I feel various BioTech depts at Unis could be approached for time-share/collaborative opportunities. Another approach could be to build the necessary hardware which is something I've been exploring the past few months - I'm building a Dremelfuge based on Cathal Garvey's design here, with some mods: http://diybio.org/2012/06/11/dremelfuge-classic/ . This could be an interesting approach - I personally know several hardware hackers who'd love get involved and improve and improvise the designs. Let's get a discussion going around this, I'm more than willing to put in time and effort to start this!Hi Nathan,Would you happen to remember any specifics on what you mentioned? I'd surely be interested to connect with biohackers in/around Bangalore! Feel free to email me if you don't wish to share personal info on mailing list.--- achOn Thu, Oct 15, 2015 at 3:24 PM, Ujjwal Thaakar <ujjwal...@gmail.com> wrote:Hi Naresh,I have been wanting to establish a space in India since January now but have not been able to follow up on it. I think we're still a little far away from establishing a self sustaining lab because awareness of DIYBio is extremely poor in our country. We first need to conduct some workshops and spread awareness till we reach a point where there would be enough people interested in space. While Bangalore seems to have a lot of biohackers, most work in propagating SynBio is taking place in New Delhi. The Department of Biotechnology is particularly interested in spreading awareness and JNU is planning to open a dedicated department in the coming years. Where are you right now. Maybe we could have a chat over Skype.
On Wednesday, October 14, 2015 at 5:36:20 PM UTC+5:30, Naresh Rambabu wrote:Hello fellow researchers,I could like to introduce myself as Naresh Rambabu, I am a graduate student from ESPCI. I am in an idea to initiate a DIY lab in India. Since I am new to initiating a DIY lab in my locality. I am looking forward for you suggestions and comments that I should keep in mind for establishing a DIY lab in India.CheersNaresh--
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--ThanksUjjwal
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