Sunday, November 29, 2009

The Latest from Boing Boing

The Latest from Boing Boing

Link to Boing Boing

Steampunk terrarrium

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 11:15 PM PST


Professor Alexander's Botanical Vasculum - Steamed 300 watt Moss Terrarium from Etsy seller SteamedGlass is a beautiful blown-glass steampunk Rube Goldberg terrarrium: "This is the largest of our "steamed" light bulb terrariums with a bulb measuring 3 3/4" x 7 3/4". It stands 10 1/4" tall as mounted on the SteamPunked stand made of a simulated cherrywood base, copper tubing, chemistry glass, an adjustable 4x magnifying glass and other ornate trimmings. The bulb houses a small solar powered LED bulb that lights itself when all other lights go out and throws a dreamlike shadow pattern on your walls making the perfect night light. It can also be turned on and off with the old fashioned knife switch mounted to the base."

Drool.

Professor Alexander's Botanical Vasculum - Steamed 300 watt Moss Terrarium (Thanks, Armand!)

Charity auction for characters names in forthcoming sf novels by great writers

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 10:38 PM PST

The Trans-Atlantic Fan Fund is a venerable institution that sends sf fans from North America to Europe and vice-versa, to bridge the world's fandoms (there are other funds that bring together fans from other parts of the world). Frank Wu, Anne KG Murphy and Brian Gray are fundraising for this year's fund, and they've solicited many writers -- Charlie Stross, Nalo Hopkinson, David Brin, Elizabeth Bear, Julie Czerneda and Mary Robinette Kowal and me! -- to donate "tuckerizations" in forthcoming works for a charity auction. Tuckerizing is the inclusion of a real person's name in a fictional piece (previous tuckerizations from charity auctions in my novels include General Graeme Sutherland in Little Brother, Suzanne Church in Makers, and Connor Prikkel in the forthcoming For the Win; my god-daughter Ada has also been tuckerized in my story "I, Robot" and in Makers).

TAFF is also auctioning off a first edition of "Nineteen Eighty-Four" (!), and John Hersey's "Hiroshima."

It's a great cause, and great prizes that make killer gifts (how cool would it be for a kid to grow up with her name on a character in a wonderful novel?)

TAFF updatery! (Thanks, Frank!)

Some whales double their weight when straining sea-water

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 10:16 PM PST

How do giant whales get so big eating such little krill? By using their balleen like a parachute and sucking in their body-weight in water in one go, then straining it out:
Since then, Potvin has brought his expertise on parachute physics to these parachuting whales. He and the other scientists have developed a sophisticated new model that tracks the incoming water more carefully. It's a lot of water, the scientists have found: in one lunge, a fin whale can momentarily double its weight.

If a whale simply let the water come rushing in, there would be a tremendous collision-more than a whale could handle. Instead, the scientists argue, the whales actively cradle their titanic gulp. As the water rushes in, the whales contract muscles in their lower jaw. The water slows down and then reverses direction, so that it's moving with the whale. (It just so happens that fin whales do have sheets of muscle and pressure-sensinging nerve endings in their lower jaw. Before now, nobody quite knew before what they were for.) Once the water is moving forward inside the whale it can then close its mouth and give an extra squeeze to filter the water through its baleen.

The Origin of Big (via Kottke)

Fine art/graffiti photoshopping contest

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 10:07 PM PST


Today on the Worth1000 photoshopping contest: "Graffiti Ren" -- scenes from fine art improved with graffiti.

Graffiti Ren 2



CCDs: a great disruptor lurking in the tech

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 10:43 PM PST

Here's a fascinating rumination on the Bitworking site about how much of the promise of RFID tags is being realized by charge-coupled devices (CCDs -- the sensor in your digital camera) instead. CCDs seems to be subject to Moore's Law, and are falling in price and increasing in capacity at an alarming rate. The potential applications are significant:

Put them on a car and point them out and you have a backup camera. Buy why restrict it to just backing up? Why isn't the rear-view mirror a full panorama of the environment around the whole car stitched together from a dozen CCD cameras?

That's pointing out from the car, point them at the car and the possibilities are different. Put them next to highways to monitor rushhour traffic. Point them at your license plate and you have either an automatic red-light running ticket writing machine, or a new toll system, where a camera based system that reads license plates could be used instead of the current RFID based solutions.

Put them on your house pointing outwards and you have a security system. Point them into the house and you have a system that turns the lights and HVAC off in rooms that are empty. Think how much better it would be than those motion sensing systems in some meeting rooms today, where the lights switch off in the room and everyone waves their hands in the air like a bunch of drunk pelicans trying to get the lights back.

If I hang one over my kitchen table will it be able to count calories for me? Can I hang one over my desk and not need to buy a scanner? How about one in the bathroom? How much health information could you extract from an image taken every morning? Could it track my weight? Detect signs of depression? Obviously there are security and privacy concerns.

CCD (via Making Light)

(Image: CCD, a Creative Commons Attribution photo from AMagill's Flickr stream)



Games Workshop declares war on best customers. Again.

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 10:09 PM PST

Dan sez, "Game publisher and miniature manufacturer Games Workshop just sent a cease and desist letter to boardgamegeek.com, telling them to remove all fan-made players' aids. This includes scenarios, rules summaries, inventory manifests, scans to help replace worn pieces -- many of these created for long out of print, well-loved games. GW did this shortly after building a lot of good will by re-releasing their out of print game 'Space Hulk' to much hoopla. And it's not their first attack on their biggest fans"

No doubt those of you who have supported Games Workshop in the past by creating files for use with their games will have noticed they are all being deleted from BGG at the behest of their lawyers.

So here's a little paeon to the games that I spent many hours creating rules summaries and reference sheets for that are no longer available here. They're still at my personal site, but I don't imagine they'll be there for long.

No doubt they'll be more items on this list before long.

The Games Workshop Files Purge of '09

Eigenharp, crazy sci-fi instrument

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 09:44 PM PST

The Eigenharp, a crazy, science fiction instrument from Eigenlabs, comes on two forms, the "Alpha" ("Our professional level instrument allows the musician to play and improvise using a limitless range of sounds with virtuoso skill. It has 120 playing keys, 12 percussion keys, two strip controllers and a breath pipe. Available in a variety of custom finishes.") and the "Pico" ("It's ideal as a solo instrument or for playing in a band. With 18 playing keys and 4 mode keys, a strip controller and breath pipe, the smaller Pico has the majority of the playing features of the Eigenharp Alpha. It plays an unlimited range of sounds and is available in two finishes."). Check out the stunning performance of the Bond theme.

Eigenlabs (Thanks, Alan!)

Pub fined £8K after user infringes copyright with its WiFi

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 09:07 AM PST

A British pub has been fined £8,000 because someone using the WiFi there allegedly committed a copyright infringement. Even though British law exempts people who provide Internet access from liability for their users' copyright infringements, the pub was still fined (the details of this are confused).
Graham Cove told ZDNet UK on Friday he believes the case to be the first of its kind in the UK. However, he would not identify the pub concerned, because its owner -- a pubco that is a client of The Cloud's -- had not yet given their permission for the case to be publicised...

According to internet law professor Lilian Edwards, of Sheffield Law School, where a business operates an open Wi-Fi spot to give customers or visitors internet access, they would be "not be responsible in theory" for users' unlawful downloads, under "existing substantive copyright law".

Pub 'fined £8k' for Wi-Fi copyright infringement (Thanks, Zoran)

DRM versus innovation

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 09:02 AM PST

Here's a superb essay on the other DRM problem -- DRM isn't only bad for fair use, it's also a disaster for innovation, because it forecloses on the possibility of disruptive new technologies (you can only build on DRM with permission from the DRM maker; no DRM maker is going to authorize a disruptive innovation that could hurt his bottom line). The paper is by Wendy "Chilling Effects" Seltzer, and will be published in the Jan 25 edition of the Berkeley Technology Law Journal.
First I briefly review the history and existing academic debates around DRM to consider why they have so overlooked the user-innovation impacts. The next sections examine the law and technology of digital rights management, particularly the interaction of statutory law, technological measures, and the contractual conditions generally attached to them. I focus particularly on the "robustness rules" in licenses at at this inter- section. I then introduce the rich literature on disruptive technology and user innovation, to argue that these copyright-driven constraints significantly harm cultural and technological development and user autonomy. I conclude that the mode-of-development tax is too high a price to pay for imperfect copyright protection.
The Imperfect is the Enemy of the Good: Anticircumvention Versus Open Innovation (via JoHo)

Boing Boing Gift Guide 2009: nonfiction! (part 4/6)

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 10:40 PM PST

Mark and I have rounded up some of our favorite items from our 2009 Boing Boing reviews for the second-annual Boing Boing gift guide. We'll do one a day for the next six days, covering media (music/games/DVDs), gadgets and stuff, kids' books, novels, nonfiction, and comics/graphic novels/art books. Today, it's nonfiction!

If Your Kid Eats This Book, Everything Will Still Be Okay: How to Know if Your Child's Injury or Illness Is Really an Emergency (Lara Zibners): Apart from a terrific title, the book has plenty going for it. Basically, Even if Your Kid Eats This Book is a detailed guide to everything you don't have to worry about. It has an orifice-by-orifice guide to detecting and removing Lego! A list of things under the sink that won't poison your kid! Sensible advice about how to get rid of dry skin! (Hot bath, then anything greasy from Crisco to Vaseline, then time). Full review | Purchase

Reset: How This Crisis Can Restore Our Values and Renew America In 96 pages, Kurt Andersen describes the United States' previous boom and bust cycles and explains why the bust cycles are essential for innovation and improvement of living standards for everyone. Times of crisis, he says, open new opportunities for making positive changes. Full review | Purchase


The End of Overeating: Taking Control of the Insatiable American Appetite (David Kessler):
Kessler delves into the psychology and neuroscience of our junk-food cravings, seeking an explanation to the conundrum of the person whose "will-power" is strong on many fronts, but who finds it hard to resist unhealthy foods (I class myself among those people). He concludes that we're extremely susceptible to reward-conditioning when the reward consists of foods that combine fat, sugar and salt, and that the food industry has evolved to deliver extremely efficient, super-sized portions of fat-sugar-salt bombs in a variety of satisfying textures and presentations.
Full review | Purchase

src="http://boingboing.net/images/masonic-myth-tb.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
The Masonic Myth:
Unlocking the Truth About the Symbols, the Secret Rites, and the
History of Freemasonry

In the introduction to The Mason Myth, Kinney (a Mason himself) wrote
that he wanted his book to be an antidote to both the "imaginative
speculations of 'alternative historians,'" and to those Masonic
histories that "succumb to the tyranny of minutiae, where a
never-ending stream of names, dates, jargon, and organizational
details numb the brains of all but the most dedicated reader." In my
opinion, he succeeds in both counts, having written a book that's both
highly-readable and down-to-earth.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0060822562/boingboing">Purchase



Twelve Hours' Sleep by Twelve Weeks Old: A Step-by-Step Plan for Baby Sleep Success (Suzy Giordano):
It takes about an hour to read and does not involve doing anything horrible to your kid like letting her cry all night. Basic method: for the first 8 weeks, keep track of when the kid feeds and sleeps. At 8 weeks, use this to come up with a sleep and feed schedule that more or less fits the rhythm she's falling into. Gently encourage her to stick to it (e.g., if she's hungry before mealtime, see if you can distract her for a few minutes [the first day], then a few minutes more [the next].)


Full review | Purchase

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width="100" height="100" align="left">
Get High Now Without
Drugs : Over 175 sensory trips and tricks for visual stimulation,
compressing time, lucid dreaming, mediation, and more

examines hypnagogic induction, theta wave brain synchronization tapes,
isolation tanks, ingesting the blood of schizophrenics, Transcendental
meditation, lucid dreaming, Yucatecan trance induction beats, binaural
beats, isolation tanks, kundalina transcendent, chanting, lucid
dreaming, mud sleep induction, risset rhythm, shepard tones, Sudarshan
Kriya, thalassotherapy, and more

Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0811867137/boingboing">Purchase



The Whuffie Factor: Using the Power of Social Networks to Build Your Business (Tara Hunt):
Hunt's book is a lot shorter on theory and manifesto than Cluetrain and a lot longer on practicalities, devoting a lot of space to explaining how all these tools work and citing examples of different commercial and charitable organizations that have used them to good effect (as well as citing cautionary examples of companies that bungled things badly, usually by being caught out in deceit of one kind or another). Because of this, Whuffie Factor is probably easier to put into effect as soon as you crack the cover, but it's also likely to go stale more quickly, as the specific technologies cited wane (Cluetrain may have pre-dated blogging, but it had enough theory-stuff that it's still worth reading today, ten years later). On the other hand, if Hunt's book does well, she'll have a nice side-line in producing annual updated editions.

Full review | Purchase


src="http://boingboing.net/images/boy-wind-xm.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
The Boy Who
Harnessed the Wind: Creating Currents of Electricity and Hope

A 14-year-old boy in Africa builds an electricity generating windmill
out of scrap. With so many tales of bloody hopelessness coming out of
Africa, this reads like a novel with a happy ending, even though it's
just the beginning for this remarkable young man, now 21 years old. I
have no doubt that William--who is rapidly becoming a symbol of promise
and possibility for the people of Africa--will be leading the way.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0061730327/boingboing">Purchase




Looking for Calvin and Hobbes: The Unconventional Story of Bill Watterson and His Revolutionary Comic Strip (Nevin Martell):
For ten years, between 1985 and 1995, Calvin and Hobbes was one the world's most beloved comic strips. And then, on the last day of 1995, the strip ended. Its mercurial and reclusive creator, Bill Watterson, not only finished the strip but withdrew entirely from public life.


Full review | Purchase

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width="100" height="100" align="left">
Wicked Plants: The
Weed That Killed Lincoln's Mother and Other Botanical
Atrocities

"It's an A to Z of plants that kill, maim, intoxicate, and otherwise
offend. You'll learn which plants to avoid (like exploding shrubs),
which plants make themselves exceedingly unwelcome (like the vine that
ate the South), and which ones have been killing for centuries (like
the weed that killed Abraham Lincoln's mother)."
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1565126831/boingboing/">Purchase





How We Decide (Jonah Lehrer):
Lehrer, author of the celebrated Proust Was a Neuroscientist, lays out the current state of the neuroscientific research into decision-making with a series of gripping anaecdotes followed by reviews of the literature and interviews with the researchers responsible for it.
Full review | Purchase

src="http://boingboing.net/images/depression-2-xm.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
Depression 2.0:
Creative Strategies for Tough Economic Times
is a practical,
empowering, hands-on guide to persevering and even thriving in the
event of an economic crisis. Placing particular emphasis on
self-sufficiency and personal resilience, this timely, informative
book offers a hopeful way forward in a time of great uncertainty.
Bankruptcy, barter, and survival investing are just a few of the
important topics explored.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1934170062/boingboing">Purchase



Free-Range Kids: Giving Our Children the Freedom We Had Without Going Nuts with Worry (Lenore Skenazy):
David Finkelhor, the head of the Crimes Against Children Research Center, has discovered pedophiles don't want to waste their time just flipping through MySpace pages or Facebook pages. It's as futile as trying to call up random numbers from the phonebook and trying to get a date. It's just a waste of time.

Full review | Purchase

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width="100" height="100" align="left">
Best iPhone Apps:
The Guide for Discriminating Downloaders
I had a blast
browsing through this full-color, 228-page book about the very best
iPhone applications. I only knew about 25% of the titles recommended
by author Josh Clark, who tested thousand of apps to pick his 200
favorite work and leisure related titles.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/059680427X/boingboing">Purchase




Junky Styling: Wardrobe Surgery (Annika Sanders and Kerry Seager):
The second section is a detailed HOWTO for recreating several of their basic garments: a suit-sleeve scarf, a "shirt wrap halter top," a "fly top" and others, with copious notes about shopping for clothes to rescue and repurpose, instructions for unpicking seams, a glossary of textile types and strategies for working with each and so on.

Full review | Purchase


src="http://boingboing.net/images/astonish-yourself-xm.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
Astonish Yourself:
101 Experiments in the Philosophy of Everyday Life
101 mental
and perceptual exercises you can perform on yourself. In his
introduction, Droit says the purpose of the experiments is to "provoke
tiny moments of awareness," and to "shake a certainty we had taken for
granted: our own identity, say, or the stability of the outside world,
or even the meanings of words." Most of the experiments require about
20 minutes to complete, and often involve nothing more than merely
thinking about something.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0142003131/boingboing">Purchase





Eat Me: The Food and Philosophy of Kenny Shopsin (Kenny Shopsin):
Kenny Shopsin's restaurant began life as a grocery store, purchased for $25,000 by his father for his peripatetic son (Shopsin describes himself then as a neurotic who saw a therapist five days a week). In the grocery store, Shopsin found a kind of frenetic peace in cultivating and deepening his relationship with his customers (one of whom, Eve, he married). Gradually, he added prepared food to the grocery lineup, then more and more, as the satisfaction of cooking for others seized his interest, until the grocery store became a restaurant.


Shopsin's memoir is like the man: loud, opinionated, warm, exuberant and absolutely delightful. He had me when he revealed that he'd named one of his dishes solely to piss off Andrea Dworkin ("she's probably never heard of this dish").

Full review | Purchase

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width="100" height="100" align="left">
The Math Book: From
Pythagoras to the 57th Dimension, 250 Milestones in the History of
Mathematics
Mathematics, as presented by Clifford Pickover,
is a palace filled with awe-inspiring curiosities. His latest is a
500-page, full-color tour of mathematical highlights from 150 Million
B.C. to 2007.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1402757964/boingboing">Purchase



World of Warcraft and Philosophy (Luke Cuddy and John Nordlinger):
This collection of essays and short fiction addresses the ethics, economics, and metaphysics of Azeroth and its inhabitants.
Full review | Purchase


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width="100" height="100" align="left">
Wild Fermentation:
The Flavor, Nutrition, and Craft of Live-Culture Foods
This
book shows you how to make a wide variety of fermented foods: beer,
wine, mead, miso, tempeh, sourdough bread, yogurt, cheese, and other
more exotic foods.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1931498237/boingboing">Purchase

src="http://boingboing.net/images/getting-arduino-xm.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
Getting Started with
Arduino
Written by Massimo Banzi, the co-founder of Arduino.
It's only 116-pages long and uses attractive hand-drawn illustrations
to get even the most clueless newbie up to speed. Filled with
easy-to-understand examples and projects
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596155514/boingboing">Purchase


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width="100" height="100" align="left">
Sew Darn Cute: 30
Sweet & Simple Projects to Sew & Embellish
Jenny's whimsical
aesthetic sensibility really resonates with me: surprising and
appealing color combinations, rounded simple geometry, mixing patterns
with solids, pleasing textures, and designs that reveal their process
of construction. Her creations are the masterful result of many years
of dedication, study, experimentation, and creativity.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0312383835/boingboing">Purchase


src="http://boingboing.net/images/iphone-fully-loaded-xm.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
iPhone Fully
Loaded
shows you how to load (hence the title) your phone
with songs, podcasts, videos, comic books, blogs, applications,
photos, spreadsheets, databases and other types of media. I learned
something new in every chapter. The way author Andy Ihnatko uses smart
playlists in iTunes is pure genius, and it's the first thing I put
into practice. His advice on ripping DVDs into movies is the best I've
read, and I'm looking forward to trying his method of converting web
sites, email, and documents into spoken text.

Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0470173688/boingboing/">Purchase


src="http://boingboing.net/images/sexology-xm.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
The Best of
Sexology: Kinky and Kooky Excerpts from America's First Sex
Magazine
collects the wackiest and most unintentionally funny
articles from America's first sex magazine, Sexology, The Illustrated
Magazine of Sex Science. "Homosexual Chickens", "Adolph Hitler's Sex
Life", "Sex and Satan", "Twin Beds or Single?", "Sexual Tattooing",
"When Midgets Marry" are just a few of the subjects covered...or
should I say uncovered?
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/076243323X/boingboing">Purchase


src="http://boingboing.net/images/show-me-how-xm.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
Show Me How: 500
Things You Should Know Instructions for Life From the Everyday to the
Exotic
My 5-year-old daughter and I quickly paged through
this book filled with cartoon-like project ideas and made a list of
things to do: grow an avocado tree from a seed, invent clay oddities,
assemble a super slingshot, tell time with a potato clock, blow a
humongous bubble, make a delicious s'more, and about 20 other
things.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0061662577/boingboing">Purchase


src="http://boingboing.net/images/sex-lives-of-famous-xm.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
The Intimate Sex
Lives of Famous People
This 600-page illicit encyclopedia of
the private lives of writers, politicians, athletes, popes,
rabble-rousers, composers, rock stars and sex symbols has been revised
and enlarged, with a dozen new entries, including ones on Kurt Cobain,
Malcolm X, Wilt Chamberlain, Ayn Rand, Jim Morrison, Nico, Aleister
Crowley, and more.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1932595295/boingboing">Purchase


src="http://boingboing.net/images/macrophenomenal-xm.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
FreeDarko presents
The Macrophenomenal Pro Basketball Almanac: Styles, Stats, and Stars
in Today's Game
An idiosyncratic, highly personal take on
professional basketball. The illustrations and overall design are
stunning.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1596915617/boingboing">Purchase


src="http://boingboing.net/images/leibovitz-at-work-xm.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
Annie Leibovitz at
Work
is not only a gossip lover's delight (she tells fun
stories about all the famous people she'd photographed, like Hunter S.
Thompson, The Rolling Stones, Queen Elizabeth, and Al Sharpton), its
also an inspiration for anyone who does creative work and wants to
continuously challenge themselves to become better at their craft.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0375505105/boingboing">Purchase



src="http://boingboing.net/images/kick-litter-xm.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
Kick Litter:
Nine-Step Program for Recovering Litter Addicts
The training
method is so simple that it is explained in two pages. The rest of the
book consists of photos of the author's cats and cutesy captions of
what the cats "think" about the method. The book's cover jacket is an
instructional poster you can remove and unfold, and contains
everything you need to know to try this method.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0974658278/boingboing">Purchase


src="http://boingboing.net/images/urban-homestead-xm.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
The Urban Homestead:
Your Guide to Self-sufficient Living in the Heart of the City

by Kelly Coyne and Erik Knutzen, is a delightfully readable and very
useful guide to front- and back-yard vegetable gardening, food
foraging, food preserving, chicken keeping, and other useful skills
for anyone interested in taking a more active role in growing and
preparing the food they eat. I learned a great deal about composting,
self-watering containers, mulching, raised bed gardens, vermiculture
(worm composting), and raising chickens by reading this info-dense
book.
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1934170011/boingboing">Purchase


src="http://boingboing.net/images/iphone-hacks-xm.jpg"
width="100" height="100" align="left">
iPhone Hacks:
Pushing the iPhone and iPod touch Beyond Their Limits
"You
can make your iPhone do all you'd expect of a smartphone -- and more.
Learn tips and techniques to unleash little-known features, find and
create innovative applications for both the iPhone and iPod touch, and
unshackle these devices to run everything from network utilities to
video game emulators."
Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596516649/boingboing">Purchase


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width="100" height="100" align="left">
Shop Class as
Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work
Matthew B.
Crawford's book is about the the importance of using your hands to
make and repair things. He compares the kind of life many people in
developed countries lead -- inside cubicles, working on things that
are several levels removed from the physical world -- to a life of
skilled labor that requires ingenuity and experience, and provides the
kinds of challenges that human beings were made to relish.

Full
review
| href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1594202230/boingboing">Purchase

Other installments:

Part One: Kids

Part Two: Media

Part Three: Gadgets


Part Four: Nonfiction< br>


Part Five: Fiction!




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