thetickler18
TMF Poster
- Joined
- May 4, 2011
- Messages
- 81
- Points
- 8
You may have read about them in tickling fiction, or seen images of one in an issue of a MTJPub comic, either way you can't get rid of the idea. A machine or device that with a press of a button, will automatically tickle your respective 'lee, either slow and sensually, or at such a speed that they go insane. Such a creation couldn't possibly exist, right?
Enter the maker movement. The concept is simple. Everyone can build or create anything they can think of. Sure it's a simple concept, but in the past years there has been a real surge in the maker culture, allowing for products such as the Arduino micro controller to surface on the market for makers to tweak, break, and fix any way they desire. In short, with enough motivation, and ingenuity, we can probably create anything we can think of.
So with the a resurgence in the idea of create our own stuff, why can't we put the same theory towards tickling?
That's the question I thought I'd ask today:
With a resurgence in the maker movement, can someone build a real tickling machine?
Enter the maker movement. The concept is simple. Everyone can build or create anything they can think of. Sure it's a simple concept, but in the past years there has been a real surge in the maker culture, allowing for products such as the Arduino micro controller to surface on the market for makers to tweak, break, and fix any way they desire. In short, with enough motivation, and ingenuity, we can probably create anything we can think of.
So with the a resurgence in the idea of create our own stuff, why can't we put the same theory towards tickling?
That's the question I thought I'd ask today:
With a resurgence in the maker movement, can someone build a real tickling machine?