Turn Off Your TV and Build Something: An Interview with Mitch Altman

Turn Off Your TV and Build Something: An Interview with Mitch Altman
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

This week I had the pleasure of interviewing a well-known hacker and activist, Mitch Altman. Mitch is so well known among hackers, makers, and people of all different walks of life that he almost needs no introduction.

We talked about the infamous TV-B-Gone, as well as his goals and outreach to teach many different people of diverse backgrounds about hacking and DIY culture.

2014-04-03-Mitch_Altman_Chaos_Communication_Camp_2011.jpg
Mitch Altman

Who are you? What do people find interesting about your work?

MA: I love what I do. That's what the primary aspect of everything I do. I do meaningful things with my time.

What was your first big project?

MA: The TV-B-Gone. It was 10 years in the making. During that time, I did jobs I thought were ok, but nothing I ever really loved. TV-B-Gone was my big break. It's a keychain that turns off TVs, and it's the only thing I've made since 2004 that makes money.

2014-04-03-TVBGone_complete.jpg

How does it work?

MA: Point it at a TV set and press the button. There is no need to hold the button down. Just keep pointing it at the TV until it turns off (which may take up to 69 seconds).

Mitch and his company have worked together with Adafruit Industries to develop a kit version of the TV-B-Gone. Mitch thinks open source kits are awesome!

How would devices like these get people interested in hacking?

MA: Building and creating is fun! That's it... Now that I've done a TEDX talk in Brussels, more people have found out about hackerspaces and will hopefully come to the hackerspaces and do cool things and spread the joy.

You co-found a very groundbreaking hackerspace, Noisebridge. What inspired you to bring hackers together into a space like Noisebridge?

Well, what struck me when I was at the hackerspace design talk at Chaos Communication Congress 2007... every time I went, I would feel so joyful... and then it all ends. I didn't want it to end! But if you have a hackerspace, it can go on forever! My friend Jake Appelbaum was there, and he had the same idea. We started talking about it, and we all decided to do that. We've been meeting every Tuesday since 2007.

I'm going to be a bit blunt. When people think of a "hacker," they usually have an image of a white, privileged male, they don't usually think of an inner-city youth of color. How do we change this?

MA: I definitely want the word hacker to apply to anyone who wants to explore and do what they love. Hacking is for everyone. Hacking is about taking anything that exists in the world as a resource, and changing it and sharing it with people. You can do hacking with science, food, ourselves... with the planet, because everything needs improvement.

There are definitions of hacker that the media has promulgated of some guy breaking into a computer to do malicious things... that's just criminal. That's not what is going on at most hackerspaces. Those people aren't improving anything, or sharing.

We can create supportive communities where everyone is welcome. At Noisebridge we purposefully set out to do that... In order to attract people of all genders, classes and ethnicities we said we are 100 percent intolerant of intolerance. We have classes and workshops to attract people to do things that maybe they had preconceived notions of what each 'gender' does. Everyone is exposed to everything. There is nothing in the human brain that says only boys can solder and only girls can push fabric underneath a sewing machine.

At Noisebridge we have been encouraging people in our community to use this as a resource. If a teacher wants to use the space to hold a class, they are welcome.

For more DIY tutorials and collaborative projects, check out the upcoming EHSM conference. The second edition of EHSM will take place in Hamburg, Germany June 27-29, 2014.

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot