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A tribute to our friend, veteran and fellow maker, Denys Antipov

A project log for uECG - small open source wireless ECG sensor

It's cheap, doesn't use a specialized heart rate AFE and can blink LEDs with your pulse :)

ultimate-roboticsUltimate Robotics 06/07/2022 at 20:373 Comments

Today, we learned that our friend, Denys Antipov, died at the frontlines from artillery fire on 11th of May. It was near Izum in Kharkiv oblast. We are heartbroken and refuse to believe it. 

Denys in his video from May 7, talking about the frontline village his unit was stationed in

To say that he was a good man is an understatement. He was amazing. We met him back in 2014, when he started a large project, a robotic arm prosthesis, when the war first broke out - and joined without a second thought. This is largely how our team formed. The project goal was initially to help veterans who lost arms and hands in battle, and also anybody else. Our uEMG project is a part of it. 

Denys (center) talking about the robotic arm project in an interview
An actual post Denys made in the project Facebook group in 2015, perfectly summing everyone's attitudes towards certain russians
Denys (right) and our team* posing for a photo for an article about the robotic arm project, in 2016

*Our members have since partially changed: Arsen - second from the left - has left, and two more people have joined, Olha and Lucy

He started the project just before he himself went to war for the first time, and came back in 2016. Later, he rented and furnished a small workshop with CNC machines and 3D printers. There, he cut wood, leather and other materials with lasers and made things like beautiful wooden puzzles, figurines, gifts, and engravings on objects like wooden boxes and knives. His recent passion was making musical boxes which played folk Ukrainian songs. He even started a Youtube channel and opened an Ebay shop to promote Ukrainian culture to people from different countries. He also 3D printed and sold supplies for 3D printers, and once collected 100 different 3D filament spools which he arranged by colors on a huge wall-sized stand, which made him very amused and proud. Later he bought a huge inkjet printer to expand a bit. The workshop grew quite a lot since 2016, and there were several people working there before the 2022 war broke out. He also created another large project - an online platform where other army veteran makers could have their businesses and sell stuff and promote it. It's called ua.gifts. It is big and has united a lot of people, but it started in that same small workshop.

The aforementioned 100 filament spools in all of their glory
Very happy Denys with his very huge inkjet printer
One of the music boxes Denys started making recently
All these cardboard cutouts with which we shipped first two uECG batches were laser cut by Denys, in his workshop. You might have gotten those!

Denys was (it's so hard to write this word!) a bright light, full of energy in everything that he did. He could do anything, and often all at once, and crack jokes in the process. Formally he was a soldier and a Korean translator and university professor. But really he was so much more, and there was something about him that would make you believe you could do anything. He often gave interviews and told news from all over the world about the projects, and lately about war. On 9th of March, he got injured and was in the hospital. Back then, we were worried but really glad he was alive and for some reason we believed nothing else could happen to him, because he was already injured once - and lightning (or shell) doesn't strike twice, does it…

And we also planned to do so much together. It's hard to understand what to do further. We don't know how to deal with this loss. We just want him to be back so much, to win the war, and then to see him again and continue our projects!

We’re proud to have known you. We will never forget you. You will always be our friend, and a hero! Glory to the heroes!

P.S. And here's how the musical box that Denys made sounds... It's playing Chervona Ruta, a popular Ukrainian song written in the 1970s and still catchy today. When people get drunk, they often sing it (which is how we know).
And this will sound even sadder, but we can't help but wonder what melodies he would make next for the box....

Discussions

Dan Julio wrote 01/15/2023 at 20:01 point

My condolences.  Your friend sounds like a wonderful person.  I can't imagine what you all are dealing with.  I hope it will end.

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Hexastorm wrote 01/17/2023 at 14:07 point

My condolences. I hope it will end and can't imagine the reality of it all.

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Henry Wintif wrote 06/23/2022 at 04:14 point

rest in peace, Denys 😢

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