What do you get when you combine an electronics hobbyist, hacker, garage mechanic, kitchen table inventor, tinkerer, and entrepreneur? A âmaker,â of course. Playful and creative, makers areâthrough expertise and experimentationâcreating art, products, and processes that change the way we think and interact with the world.  As youâll see from the 21 interviews in Makers at Work, inquisitive makers are just as apt to pick up a laser cutter or an Arduino as a wrench to fashion something new. For example, youâll meet Jeri Ellsworth, who might provide a video lecture on magnetic logic one day and a tutorial on welding a roll bar on a stock car the next. Youâll also meet Eben Upton, who put cheap, powerful computing in the hands of everyone with the Raspberry Pi; Becky Stern, who jazzes up clothing with sensors and LEDs; and bunnie Huang, who knows the ins and outs of the Shenzhen, China, electronics parts markets as well as anyone. As all the interviews in Makers at Work show, makers have something in common: reverence for our technical past coupled with an aversion to convention. If they canât invent new processes or products, itâs simply not worth doing. Crazy as foxes, makersâworking in the spirit of Tesla, Wozniak, Edison, Gates, Musk and many othersâcan bring sophisticated products to the people or to the market as fast or faster than large corporations. And they are not just enabling new technologies and devicesâthey are changing the way these devices are funded, manufactured, assembled, and delivered. Makers at Work puts a spotlight on the maker mindset and motivation of those who are reinventing the world one object or idea at a time. You will: Meet the individuals who define what it means to be a maker. Learn about the tools and technologies driving the new industrial revolution. Discover ways to scale yourweekend project into a profitable business. See how others have used to crowdfunding to make their visions a reality. Learn how open-source hardware and software is enabling whole new categories of products by removing barriers of entry for inventors. The new masters of the âMakerverseâ ask two questions: Can it be done? Is it fun? As these interviews will show, the answer to both questions is, âLetâs find out.â