Sunday, September 30, 2012

The Latest from Boing Boing

The Latest from Boing Boing

Is this email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser.
Boing Boing
Watchismo

[Sponsor] Tendence watches now have fully mechanical automatic movements!  Watchismo has the exclusive for the new Tendence Skeleton Watches, each with fully exposed 'skeletonized' mechanics seen both from the top of the dial and the see-through crystal of the caseback where the rotor can be seen revolving & generating power the old fashioned way -- with cogs, gears and hairsprings! A blend of form and function, the Tendence collection is a highly evolved concept, with extreme dimensions and three-dimensional numbers carved to stand high above the concave dial, itself cut from stainless steel, polycarbonate or titanium.s.

Great Graphic Novels: Promethea, by Alan Moore
Origami TIE Fighter
eBook Review: Warm Moonlight
Star Wars meets Rushmore meets Breakfast Club: Jedi High
Thomas Jefferson, enthusiastic, brutal slaver
Firing a pistol underwater
Dinosaur
Smith-Corona's voice letters by post: dead media
Greek Pastafarian arrested for "Cyber Crimes"
Princess Vader goes to Disneyland

 

Great Graphic Novels: Promethea, by Alan Moore

By Angus Stocking on Sep 30, 2012 12:30 pm

Last month I asked my friends to write about books they loved (you can read all the essays here). This month, I invited them to write about their favorite graphic novels, and they selected some excellent titles. I hope you enjoy them! (Read all the Great Graphic Novel essays here.) -- Mark Promethea, by Alan ...
Read in browser

Origami TIE Fighter

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 30, 2012 11:34 am

Martin "starwarigami" Hunt made this lovely TIE Fighter origami piece for London's MCM Comic Expo and contributed it to the Boing Boing Flickr Pool, along with several other marvellous creations. The photo notes state: "Folded from a 2 by 1 rectangle cut from a sheet of 150gsm A1 craft paper. For a B.O.S. display at ...
Read in browser

eBook Review: Warm Moonlight

By Jason Weisberger on Sep 30, 2012 10:26 am

Warm Moonlight is the second Kindle Single I've read by Joseph Wurtenbaugh. I really like his style! Warm Moonlight reveals a former 20's gun moll turned grandmother, sharing a supernatural story of their family past with her granddaughter. While the story isn't the most original and you've heard it before, Wurtenbaugh does a wonderful job ...
Read in browser

Star Wars meets Rushmore meets Breakfast Club: Jedi High

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 30, 2012 09:00 am

Vincent sez, "A hard-working group of film students from Oak Park High in Winnipeg, Manitoba made this intergalactic cinematic mashup, which is an homage not only to Star Wars, but also The Breakfast Club and Rushmore." Jedi High (Thanks, Vincent!)
Read in browser

Thomas Jefferson, enthusiastic, brutal slaver

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 29, 2012 11:59 pm

Marilyn sez, "My historian friend Henry Wiencek was distressed when he found, halfway into his research on Master of the Mountain: Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves a new book about Thomas Jefferson, that generations of historians had been covering up Jefferson's dark side: he wasn't the lenient, soft-hearted, reluctant slave owner that he'd been made ...
Read in browser

Firing a pistol underwater

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 29, 2012 09:09 pm

Destin from Smarter Every Day captured high-speed images of both a revolver and an automatic pistol discharging underwater; the water perfectly captures and renders visible the gas forces at work in the system (and makes for a beautiful picture). I performed an experiment to see what the differences were between semi-automatic pistols and revolvers. The ...
Read in browser

Dinosaur

By Rob Beschizza on Sep 29, 2012 06:30 pm

The correct answer is, of course, Ankylosaurus.
Read in browser

Smith-Corona's voice letters by post: dead media

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 29, 2012 06:02 pm

Here's a weird bit of dead media: a Smith-Corona audio-letter that used a "Letterpack cartridge" (which appears to be a 3.5" floppy disc) to record and play back personal voice-letters sent by post. The apparatus is a fascinating dead branch in design history, something that looks like it might be descended from a desktop intercom ...
Read in browser

Greek Pastafarian arrested for "Cyber Crimes"

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 29, 2012 04:13 pm

A reader writes, "On September 24, Greece's Cyber Crimes division arrested a 27 year old man on charges of blasphemy, for his website that mocks a well-known Greek monk Elder Paisios, using the name Elder Pastitsios (the even better-known Greek pasta dish). The link is to a Greek blog, which shows a religious procession through ...
Read in browser

Princess Vader goes to Disneyland

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 29, 2012 02:57 pm

This little girl reportedly visited Disneyland with her parents in her adorable princess Vader Hallowe'en costume, taking it for a test drive. Rsharich, the redditor who posted the pic, doesn't mention how the day went, but I assume it was, you know, epic. Friends took their daughter dressed like this, all day, to Disneyland (i.imgur.com)
Read in browser




Meet SparkTruck, an “educational build-mobile” for the twenty-first century.

 

Dreamed up by a group of Stanford d.school students and funded through Kickstarter, SparkTruck is a mobile maker space currently traveling across the United States. At schools and summer camps and libraries around the country, the SparkTruck team offers workshops to help kids “find their inner maker” as they design and build projects like stamps, stop-motion animation clips, and “vibrobots.”

 

[video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UmRKXqDwieY&feature=plcp]

 

This might seem all shiny and new. And it is—but only in part. What’s so striking (and exciting) about SparkTruck is the way it combines old and new. It does so in the tools it gets kids using, which range from pipe cleaners to laser cutters. It does so in its educational approach, which combines cutting-edge (get it?) STEM and design pedagogy with the fundamentals of an old-school shop class. And it does so in its method, which combines the iconic, century-old technology of the bookmobile with the hot new form of the maker space.

 

In doing so, SparkTruck joins a growing number of libraries which are combining time-tested principles (like equal access to information) with new technologies (like 3-D printers), putting in maker spaces and media production labs alongside bookshelves and meeting rooms. As I’ve argued over on bookmobility.org, these combinations make sense because reading and making actually have a lot in common. They’re both creative processes that take existing materials and combine them in new ways. Getting people engaged in those kinds of processes—through imaginative thinking, contemplation, hands-on problem-solving, and collaborative learning—is what both maker spaces and libraries are all about.

 

Taking that commitment on the road with scissors and hammers and 3-D printers and a great big bookmobile-like truck, SparkTruck serves as a laboratory for new approaches, as well as a reminder that trying new things doesn’t have to (and probably shouldn’t!) necessarily mean tossing old ones out.

 

After all, what would those vibrobots be without classically crafty pipe cleaners and tongue depressors? And what would a library be without the creative, participatory, straight-up awesome experience of reading?

 

SparkTruck schedule [sparktruck.org]

How to arrange a visit from SparkTruck [sparktruck.org]

SparkTruck YouTube channel [youtube.com]

 

Signature: --Derek Attig, bookmobility.org

Sent by 2012 Boing Boing, CC.
You are subscribed to email updates from Boing Boing. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe immediately.
Our mailing address is:
Boing Boing
905 Wettach St
Pittsburgh, Pa 15122

Add us to your address book

Saturday, September 29, 2012

The Latest from Boing Boing

The Latest from Boing Boing

Is this email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser.
Boing Boing
Watchismo

[Sponsor] Tendence watches now have fully mechanical automatic movements!  Watchismo has the exclusive for the new Tendence Skeleton Watches, each with fully exposed 'skeletonized' mechanics seen both from the top of the dial and the see-through crystal of the caseback where the rotor can be seen revolving & generating power the old fashioned way -- with cogs, gears and hairsprings! A blend of form and function, the Tendence collection is a highly evolved concept, with extreme dimensions and three-dimensional numbers carved to stand high above the concave dial, itself cut from stainless steel, polycarbonate or titanium.s.

Great Graphic Novels: The Cereal Killings by James Sturm
Fox News broadcasts a live suicide
Boppo the Bad Breath Clown (vintage ad)
Free/open math textbook written in a day
Why can't pacemaker users read their own medical data?
Vancouverites! Coming to Kidsbooks!
TV news programs ignore false claims in the thousands of political ads that pay their bills
Nude Psychotherapy (vintage seventies magazine ad)
Mystical experiences without significance
US naval analyst on science fiction space warfare
Predictable, but reassuring news: Marc Webb signs on to direct The Amazing Spider-Man sequel
Treasure Island Music Festival 2012: contest winner!
iPad left at airport checkpoint ends up at TSA inspector's house
AMC will stream the season premiere of The Walking Dead for Dish customers
Pennsylvania police post perp pix on Pinterest
"One Day," an animated short (video)
The Star Trek-Psy parody you know you wanted: Klingon Style
Outlaw auction includes Bonnie and Clyde's guns
A classic work of entomology, available online in French and English
This Friday, procrastinate with history!
Help fund Diana Gameros album

 

Great Graphic Novels: The Cereal Killings by James Sturm

By Bob Knetzger on Sep 29, 2012 12:30 pm

Last month I asked my friends to write about books they loved (you can read all the essays here). This month, I invited them to write about their favorite graphic novels, and they selected some excellent titles. I hope you enjoy them! (Read all the Great Graphic Novel essays here.) -- Mark The Cereal Killings ...
Read in browser

Fox News broadcasts a live suicide

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 29, 2012 11:51 am

Yesterday, Fox News aired live footage of a man in Phoenix shooting himself in the head. According to the Times of India Fox got so excited about following a carjacking suspect in a high-speed chase that they forgot to cut the feed (which ran on a five-second delay) when he got out of his car, ...
Read in browser

Boppo the Bad Breath Clown (vintage ad)

By Xeni Jardin on Sep 29, 2012 11:27 am

Image Link. A cheerful, totally non-creepy ad from days of yore, scanned and uploaded to the Boing Boing Flickr Pool by reader v.valenti.
Read in browser

Free/open math textbook written in a day

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 29, 2012 08:47 am

Here is a free/open upper secondary mathematics textbook written in a single day by a group of Finnish math teachers, working together in a "booksprint." Related news: California's passed a bill establishing 50 "open source" (CC-BY) textbooks for core lower-division college courses (though, as a poster on Slashdot notes, this still has to be funded ...
Read in browser

Why can't pacemaker users read their own medical data?

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 28, 2012 11:08 pm

In this ten minute TEDx talk, Hugo Campos explains his frustration with the fact that his pacemaker is designed to let his doctor read his biometric status, but to stop the patient from doing the same. As a result, Campos isn't able to use his pacemaker as a diagnostic tool to help make good choices ...
Read in browser

Vancouverites! Coming to Kidsbooks!

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 28, 2012 10:17 pm

As part of my Pirate Cinema tour I'll be coming to Vancouver's Kidsbooks on Oct 21 at 7PM. You've got to buy a $23.50 ticket, but it comes with a copy of the book, which normally retails for $25. Kidsbooks is one of the last independents standing in Vancouver, and they're a great store, so ...
Read in browser

TV news programs ignore false claims in the thousands of political ads that pay their bills

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 28, 2012 08:49 pm

Josh Levy from Free Press sez, "My colleague Tim Karr just released a report exposing the billions spent on political ads around the country -- and how that money is pocketed by local TV stations. Are these stations offering any local news coverage to debunk the lies in these ads? Are they exposing the deep-pocketed ...
Read in browser

Nude Psychotherapy (vintage seventies magazine ad)

By Xeni Jardin on Sep 28, 2012 08:22 pm

"Be the first on your block to know about nude psychotherapy." A 1970s-era magazine ad, scanned and shared in the Boing Boing Flickr Pool by Boing Boing reader v.valenti.
Read in browser

Mystical experiences without significance

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 28, 2012 06:23 pm

Ed from Aeon sez, "The Scottish science fiction writer Ken MacLeod, (Intrusion, The Night Sessions) has a short essay in Aeon magazine exploring two strange sensations. Each one sounds like a mystical experience, but 'solves no problem, conveys no insight, and yet leaves me with an impression of significance'. Are they mere glitches in the ...
Read in browser

US naval analyst on science fiction space warfare

By David Pescovitz on Sep 28, 2012 05:16 pm

Foreign Policy magazine interviewed naval analyst Chris Weuve, a former US Naval War College research professor, about space warfare in science fiction. Has sci-fi affected the way that our navies conduct warfare? CW: This is a question that I occasionally think about. Many people point to the development of the shipboard Combat Information Center in ...
Read in browser

Predictable, but reassuring news: Marc Webb signs on to direct The Amazing Spider-Man sequel

By Jamie Frevele on Sep 28, 2012 04:38 pm

In Stuff We Knew Would Probably Happen, the director of this summer's The Amazing Spider-Man, Marc Webb, has officially been confirmed to helm the sequel. And it's a good thing, too, because it already had a release date of May 2, 2014! That would have been really awkward without a director. Mr. Parker/Spidey, Andrew Garfield, ...
Read in browser

Treasure Island Music Festival 2012: contest winner!

By David Pescovitz on Sep 28, 2012 04:24 pm

I'm pleased to announce that the winner of our Treasure Island Music Festival 2012 ticket contest is Russell Walks! Below is his witty winning Haiku, about The xx, who are playing at the festival. Along with the Boing Boing t-shirt that all three finalists scored, Russell receives a pair of VIP 2-Day Tickets to the ...
Read in browser

iPad left at airport checkpoint ends up at TSA inspector's house

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 28, 2012 03:15 pm

ABC News ran a sting against dirty TSA inspectors by leaving behind iPads (with tracking spyware) at ten airport checkpoints known for theft and following them electronically. One iPad, left at an Orlando checkpoint, moved 30 miles to the home of Andy Ramirez, a TSA inspector at the airport. Initially, he denied stealing the iPad, ...
Read in browser

AMC will stream the season premiere of The Walking Dead for Dish customers

By Jamie Frevele on Sep 28, 2012 03:09 pm

As they did for the season premiere of Breaking Bad this summer, AMC will be streaming the third season premiere of The Walking Dead online for all those frustrated Dish customers who still don't have AMC. It's only good for the one episode -- airing Sunday, October 14 at 9:00 PM EST) -- and then ...
Read in browser

Pennsylvania police post perp pix on Pinterest

By Xeni Jardin on Sep 28, 2012 02:54 pm

The Pottstown Mercury, a newspaper in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, recently started posting police mugshots of wanted criminals on Pinterest. Sounds crazy, right? Well, the novel use of a social networking site known best for nail art, cupcakes, and motivational posters with bad typography has become quite a success for local law enforcement. As you can see ...
Read in browser

"One Day," an animated short (video)

By Xeni Jardin on Sep 28, 2012 02:41 pm

[Video Link] A beautiful, Pixar-esque short from students at the French arts and media school Gobelins. More wonderful shorts on their YouTube channel. (via Short of the Week)
Read in browser

The Star Trek-Psy parody you know you wanted: Klingon Style

By Jamie Frevele on Sep 28, 2012 01:54 pm

This was destined to happen, and it's all in Klingon. What better way to celebrate the 25th anniversary of Star Trek: The Next Generation and the internet, all at the same time? (video link) (via Comediva)
Read in browser

Outlaw auction includes Bonnie and Clyde's guns

By David Pescovitz on Sep 28, 2012 01:50 pm

You could be the new owner of Bonnie & Clyd's personal pistols, Bugsy Siegel's Nevada Project Corporation stock certificate, or a subpoena signed by Wyatt Earp. This Sunday, RR Auction is holding an "American Gansters, Outlaws, and Lawmen" auction with those fine artifacts and many more criminal curiosities. "Bonnie and Clyde's guns go up for ...
Read in browser

A classic work of entomology, available online in French and English

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Sep 28, 2012 01:30 pm

In 1879, Jean-Henri Fabre wrote a book about insects called Souvenirs entomologiques. Today it's considered a classic of entomology. An English translation, with some absolutely beautiful illustrations like the cicadas pictured above, was published in 1921. You can read the full book online for free. Yes, both versions. The original French work is available at ...
Read in browser

This Friday, procrastinate with history!

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Sep 28, 2012 01:14 pm

Perhaps you will enjoy this in-depth analysis of the history of Roman charioteers, their sport, and their role in ancient Roman society. I haven't had a chance to read through this whole thing yet (because, you know, I have to work) but what I have read is fascinating. Be sure to check out the Appendix, ...
Read in browser

Help fund Diana Gameros album

By David Pescovitz on Sep 28, 2012 01:04 pm

Diana Gameros is a deeply talented singer/songwriter in San Francisco who creates soulful, passionate, and enchanting music infused with her Latin heritage. As I've written before, Diana, who was born in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, writes songs that reflect the 21st century experiences of a young indie artist at the borderlands between cultures, languages, and genres. ...
Read in browser




Meet SparkTruck, an “educational build-mobile” for the twenty-first century.

 

Dreamed up by a group of Stanford d.school students and funded through Kickstarter, SparkTruck is a mobile maker space currently traveling across the United States. At schools and summer camps and libraries around the country, the SparkTruck team offers workshops to help kids “find their inner maker” as they design and build projects like stamps, stop-motion animation clips, and “vibrobots.”

 

[video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UmRKXqDwieY&feature=plcp]

 

This might seem all shiny and new. And it is—but only in part. What’s so striking (and exciting) about SparkTruck is the way it combines old and new. It does so in the tools it gets kids using, which range from pipe cleaners to laser cutters. It does so in its educational approach, which combines cutting-edge (get it?) STEM and design pedagogy with the fundamentals of an old-school shop class. And it does so in its method, which combines the iconic, century-old technology of the bookmobile with the hot new form of the maker space.

 

In doing so, SparkTruck joins a growing number of libraries which are combining time-tested principles (like equal access to information) with new technologies (like 3-D printers), putting in maker spaces and media production labs alongside bookshelves and meeting rooms. As I’ve argued over on bookmobility.org, these combinations make sense because reading and making actually have a lot in common. They’re both creative processes that take existing materials and combine them in new ways. Getting people engaged in those kinds of processes—through imaginative thinking, contemplation, hands-on problem-solving, and collaborative learning—is what both maker spaces and libraries are all about.

 

Taking that commitment on the road with scissors and hammers and 3-D printers and a great big bookmobile-like truck, SparkTruck serves as a laboratory for new approaches, as well as a reminder that trying new things doesn’t have to (and probably shouldn’t!) necessarily mean tossing old ones out.

 

After all, what would those vibrobots be without classically crafty pipe cleaners and tongue depressors? And what would a library be without the creative, participatory, straight-up awesome experience of reading?

 

SparkTruck schedule [sparktruck.org]

How to arrange a visit from SparkTruck [sparktruck.org]

SparkTruck YouTube channel [youtube.com]

 

Signature: --Derek Attig, bookmobility.org

Sent by 2012 Boing Boing, CC.
You are subscribed to email updates from Boing Boing. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe immediately.
Our mailing address is:
Boing Boing
905 Wettach St
Pittsburgh, Pa 15122

Add us to your address book

Friday, September 28, 2012

The Latest from Boing Boing

The Latest from Boing Boing

Is this email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser.
Boing Boing
Watchismo

[Sponsor] Tendence watches now have fully mechanical automatic movements!  Watchismo has the exclusive for the new Tendence Skeleton Watches, each with fully exposed 'skeletonized' mechanics seen both from the top of the dial and the see-through crystal of the caseback where the rotor can be seen revolving & generating power the old fashioned way -- with cogs, gears and hairsprings! A blend of form and function, the Tendence collection is a highly evolved concept, with extreme dimensions and three-dimensional numbers carved to stand high above the concave dial, itself cut from stainless steel, polycarbonate or titanium.s.

Great Graphic Novels: Zap Comix #2
Ye Smokiana: 1890 study of smoking
Tear-off cardboard USB flash-drives
The Dog Stars: terrific book about life after 99.9% of humans are wiped out
Curiosity adds to evidence that water once flowed on Mars
F.T.C. plans new privacy protection regulation, "for the children"
Mystery around anti-muslim filmmaker and fraudster deepens as yet another alias is revealed
Yarn bomb transit protest in Edinburgh
UK banks use robo-callers to make fraud-check calls, conditioning customers to hand out personal information to anonymous machines that phone them up out of the blue
Man behind "Innocence of Muslims" video ordered jailed for violating fraud probation by using computers
Herbert Lom, who played stressed-out boss of Inspector Clouseau in "Pink Panther" films, has died
Helmetcam video of US soldier under fire in Afghanistan
Worst fight scene ever? More like BEST fight scene ever. (video)
Panama's new copyright law is the worst in the history of the universe
Former top US copyright bureaucrat thinks all communications/entertainment technology should be illegal until Congress approves it
The Wrylon Robotical Illustrated Catalog of Botanical 'Bots
Disgraced New Yorker journo speaks to LA Magazine
Blood Brother trailer
Steampunk Nintendo casemod
Worst movie death scene ever? More like BEST movie death scene ever. (video)
Drilling for Hoffa
Why don't giraffes have necks as long as a brachiosaurus?
Human flesh pop-up butcher shop in Smithfield to promote new Resident Evil installment
Commodity market prediction takes the Internet by storm
The champagne of national unity
"Images" from the edge of a black hole
RiffTrax takes on The Hunger Games, in blatant defiance of President Snow
Clay Shirky at TED: "How the Internet will (one day) transform government"
How records are made
Incredible 360° interactive panorama of Great Pyramids

 

Great Graphic Novels: Zap Comix #2

By Adam Parfrey on Sep 28, 2012 12:30 pm

Last month I asked my friends to write about books they loved (you can read all the essays here). This month, I invited them to write about their favorite graphic novels, and they selected some excellent titles. I hope you enjoy them! (Read all the Great Graphic Novel essays here.) -- Mark Zap Comix #2 ...
Read in browser

Ye Smokiana: 1890 study of smoking

By David Pescovitz on Sep 28, 2012 12:22 pm

RT Pritchett's Ye Smokiana, from 1890, appears to a very informative "historical" and "ethnographical" study of smoking. It's illustrated with beautiful color drawings smoking implements from around the world, more specifically "pipes of all nations." Ye Smokiana is now on the auction block at eBay. Ye Smokiana (Thanks, Randall de Rijk!)
Read in browser

Tear-off cardboard USB flash-drives

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 28, 2012 12:07 pm

Here's a cute concept-design for tear-off, disposable flash-drives from Art Lebedev, who predicts, "Stick will become even simpler vehicle than once floppy" (mangled Russian-English interpretation courtesy of Google Translate). I wonder if NFC/ultra-wideband wireless transfer will make low-capacity flash drives obsolete before they get cheap enough to make into cardboard disposables, though. Концепт флеш-накопителя «Флешкус» ...
Read in browser

The Dog Stars: terrific book about life after 99.9% of humans are wiped out

By Mark Frauenfelder on Sep 28, 2012 12:00 pm

I never get tired of reading novels about life on Earth following a disaster that wipes out 99.9% of the human population. Earth Abides and I am Legend are two of my favorites in this sub-genre. I like these stories fro several reasons: I'm fascinated in seeing how people figure out how to survive after ...
Read in browser

Curiosity adds to evidence that water once flowed on Mars

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Sep 28, 2012 11:45 am

When a narrow stream, flowing downhill, meets a wide, significantly-flatter valley, you get an alluvial fan — a place where the flow of water spreads out, slows down, and leaves behind all the rocks and sediment it's no longer moving fast enough to carry. At least, that's how it works on Earth. Once upon a ...
Read in browser

F.T.C. plans new privacy protection regulation, "for the children"

By Xeni Jardin on Sep 28, 2012 11:32 am

COPA, the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998, requires web sites for kids to obtain parental consent before collecting personal data, but much has changed online since 1998. The NYT reports that Federal regulators "are about to take the biggest steps in more than a decade to protect children online," by restricting the ability ...
Read in browser

Mystery around anti-muslim filmmaker and fraudster deepens as yet another alias is revealed

By Xeni Jardin on Sep 28, 2012 10:16 am

As if "Sam Bacile," "PJ Tobacco," and dozens more colorful fake names weren't enough, the "Innocence of Muslims" guy apparently had yet another alias. A California judge has detained him for violating the terms of his probation by using a computer to make and upload the crappy and controversial film to YouTube.
Read in browser

Yarn bomb transit protest in Edinburgh

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 28, 2012 09:01 am

An unknown yarn-bomber has taken to the streets of Edinburgh with a political message, opposing the tramway expansion underway there. Yarnivore Rose says, "Actual political speech in yarnbomb form, rather than 'mere' decoration! BRING IT!" More from The Scotsman: Grant McKeenan, who owns the Copymade Shop on West Maitland Street and who has started his ...
Read in browser

UK banks use robo-callers to make fraud-check calls, conditioning customers to hand out personal information to anonymous machines that phone them up out of the blue

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 28, 2012 12:00 am

My latest Guardian column, "Automated calls, fraud and the banks: a mismatch made in hell," reacts to the news that UK banks are using robo-call machines to check in with customers on possibly fraudulent transactions, and going about it in the worst way possible: The banks, bless them, are only trying to prevent fraud, but ...
Read in browser

Man behind "Innocence of Muslims" video ordered jailed for violating fraud probation by using computers

By Xeni Jardin on Sep 27, 2012 10:27 pm

Nakoula Basseley Nakoula escorted by LA County Sherriff's deputies from his home in Cerritos, CA. Photo: AP/CBS2-KCAL9, LA. A federal judge today determined that California resident Nakoula Basseley Nakoula (aka Sam Bacile), one of the men behind a crappy, anti-Islamic YouTube video linked to violent protests in the Middle East and the death of a ...
Read in browser

Herbert Lom, who played stressed-out boss of Inspector Clouseau in "Pink Panther" films, has died

By Xeni Jardin on Sep 27, 2012 10:16 pm

Czech-born actor Herbert Lom, best known as the weary boss of Inspector Clouseau in the Peter Sellers Pink Panther movies, died today at 95 years of age. His son Alec Lom told the Associated Press that his dad "died peacefully in his sleep at home in London." A two-part series of clips on YouTube: Part ...
Read in browser

Helmetcam video of US soldier under fire in Afghanistan

By Xeni Jardin on Sep 27, 2012 10:09 pm

From the YouTube description of this purported "helmetcam" video from a soldier in Kunar Province, Afghanistan: no shots penetrated his body armor, and he made it home with no permanent injuries. I got a hit a total of 4 times. My helmet cam died and i made it down the mountain on my own. I ...
Read in browser

Worst fight scene ever? More like BEST fight scene ever. (video)

By Xeni Jardin on Sep 27, 2012 09:34 pm

[Video Link] Continuing in our Turksploitation theme, a spectacularly awful fight scene from the Turkish film "Death Warrior." Previously: worst death scene ever. (thanks, Michelle Strait, via internalbleeding)
Read in browser

Panama's new copyright law is the worst in the history of the universe

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 27, 2012 09:22 pm

We've seen some stupid copyright laws in the past fifteen years, but Panama's new law -- which has passed the legislature and merely awaits executive approval. Under Bill 510, the Panamanian copyright office has the power to pursue file-sharers directly, fining each one $100,000 ($200,000 on second offense) and keeping the money for itself, paying ...
Read in browser

Former top US copyright bureaucrat thinks all communications/entertainment technology should be illegal until Congress approves it

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 27, 2012 07:26 pm

Ralph Oman, the former bureaucrat who served as Register of Copyrights to the US Copyright Office, has filed an amicus brief in the lawsuit against Aereo, a company that makes server racks with thousands of tiny aerials that are used to capture over-the-air broadcast TV and transmit it to viewers using the Internet, with each ...
Read in browser

The Wrylon Robotical Illustrated Catalog of Botanical 'Bots

By Mark Frauenfelder on Sep 27, 2012 07:03 pm

My buddy Barry McWilliams has a kickstarter up for a fun book he wrote and illustrated called The Wrylon Robotical Illustrated Catalog of Botanical 'Bots. He gave me a sneak peek of the book and it's wonderful. He's close to being fully funded after just a few days. Go Barry! The idea of a fleet ...
Read in browser

Disgraced New Yorker journo speaks to LA Magazine

By Mark Frauenfelder on Sep 27, 2012 06:51 pm

Kari Mozena of Los Angeles magazine says: This month, Los Angeles magazine tackles the imbroglio surrounding the once-heralded (and now discredited) genius in our backyard: Jonah Lehrer. In the piece, Lehrer speaks (via email) for the first time since issuing a statement about resigning from The New Yorker in July. Lehrer tells editor-at-large Amy Wallace ...
Read in browser

Blood Brother trailer

By Mark Frauenfelder on Sep 27, 2012 06:34 pm

Blood Brother Trailer from Blood Brother on Vimeo. Danny Yourd, producer of Blood Brother says: Blood Brother is the story of a group of children infected with HIV and Rocky Braat, a disenchanted young American that met them while drifting through India. He wanted to save them all, but in reality he couldn’t cure even ...
Read in browser

Steampunk Nintendo casemod

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 27, 2012 06:06 pm

Redditor Andrew5785 refurbed an elderly Nintendo system for a covetous steampunk nephew, turning it into a sweet little contrafactual brass retrofuture contraption. Steam-Punk Nintendo: Built this for my nephew that likes steam-punk and wanted my old Nintendo. (imgur.com)
Read in browser

Worst movie death scene ever? More like BEST movie death scene ever. (video)

By Xeni Jardin on Sep 27, 2012 05:41 pm

[Video Link] Apparently, a clip from the Turkish movie "Kareteci Kız 1973." HT: Joe Sabia.
Read in browser

Drilling for Hoffa

By David Pescovitz on Sep 27, 2012 04:57 pm

Tomorrow, police will drill through a concrete slab at a Detroit home where Jimmy Hoffa may be buried. They are responding to what they say is a "credible" tip from a man who claims he saw a burial take place at the home in 1975 around when Hoffa vanished. "We don't believe it's Jimmy Hoffa," ...
Read in browser

Why don't giraffes have necks as long as a brachiosaurus?

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Sep 27, 2012 04:49 pm

We think of giraffes as long-necked creatures, but compared to ancient sauropod dinosaurs (a family that includes the brachiosaurus and apatosaurus) even the longest-necked giraffe may as well be nicknamed "Stumpy". In a paper published online at arXiv site, two paleontologists analyzed the biology of sauropods in an attempt to figure out which features allowed ...
Read in browser

Human flesh pop-up butcher shop in Smithfield to promote new Resident Evil installment

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 27, 2012 04:19 pm

Capcom is running a "pop up human butchery and morgue" at Smithfields meat market in London to promote the new Resident Evil installment. It'll be open for two days: Sept 28 and 29. WARNING: Gross imagery within. Click through at your peril. Once open, Resident Evil fans and unsuspecting members of the public will be ...
Read in browser

Commodity market prediction takes the Internet by storm

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Sep 27, 2012 03:59 pm

Good news! There is not an unavoidable bacon shortage looming in our future. Bad news! What was actually being predicted was really an increase in meat prices across the board. Droughts have completely decimated this year's corn crop, and as corn is the stuff we usually feed our meat, it's going to cost more to ...
Read in browser

The champagne of national unity

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Sep 27, 2012 03:47 pm

According to a survey of 200,000 Americans, Miller High Life is the most bi-partisan of beers. Republicans favor Samuel Adams and, apparently, there are a lot of Democrats drinking Heineken. (Although one might argue that these results are heavily skewed, as the survey did not include either microbrews or microparties. God only knows what the ...
Read in browser

"Images" from the edge of a black hole

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Sep 27, 2012 03:16 pm

EDIT: This post originally went up with the wrong images. Sorry about that. This is not a photograph. But it's still amazing. An important thing to remember about science is that some of the stuff we talk about in the general public as "fact" — like, say, black holes — haven't actually been seen by ...
Read in browser

RiffTrax takes on The Hunger Games, in blatant defiance of President Snow

By Jamie Frevele on Sep 27, 2012 03:10 pm

Good news for everyone who loves watching hit movies get mercilessly mocked! The RiffTrax crew -- Michael J. Nelson, Kevin Murphy, and Bill Corbett -- have emerged from their secret bunker in Panem's Capitol to proudly present their commentary for the teenager-murdering blockbuster The Hunger Games! The MP3 track just became available today and is ...
Read in browser

Clay Shirky at TED: "How the Internet will (one day) transform government"

By Cory Doctorow on Sep 27, 2012 03:09 pm

Clay Shirky's TED talk, "How the Internet will (one day) transform government," is a smart, fast, funny look at how the Internet lowers the cost of doing things together. Given that the core task of government and industry is the coordination of collective effort, this lowering cost means big changes. The open-source world has learned ...
Read in browser

How records are made

By David Pescovitz on Sep 27, 2012 03:02 pm

Gorgeous black and white photos from 1954 and 1962 of vinyl records being made, including scans of an album jacket with a description of the process. "How records are made" (Voices of East Anglia, via @chris_carter_)
Read in browser

Incredible 360° interactive panorama of Great Pyramids

By David Pescovitz on Sep 27, 2012 02:25 pm

AirPano created a breathtaking 360° interactive panorama of Egypt's Great Pyramids of Giza. The video above shows how AirPano collected the images that went into the panorama. How did they do it? As Greg from Daily Grail explains, "Just like the aliens that built the Giza pyramids, they used UFOs (or possibly remote-controlled drone-copters) to ...
Read in browser




Meet SparkTruck, an “educational build-mobile” for the twenty-first century.

 

Dreamed up by a group of Stanford d.school students and funded through Kickstarter, SparkTruck is a mobile maker space currently traveling across the United States. At schools and summer camps and libraries around the country, the SparkTruck team offers workshops to help kids “find their inner maker” as they design and build projects like stamps, stop-motion animation clips, and “vibrobots.”

 

[video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UmRKXqDwieY&feature=plcp]

 

This might seem all shiny and new. And it is—but only in part. What’s so striking (and exciting) about SparkTruck is the way it combines old and new. It does so in the tools it gets kids using, which range from pipe cleaners to laser cutters. It does so in its educational approach, which combines cutting-edge (get it?) STEM and design pedagogy with the fundamentals of an old-school shop class. And it does so in its method, which combines the iconic, century-old technology of the bookmobile with the hot new form of the maker space.

 

In doing so, SparkTruck joins a growing number of libraries which are combining time-tested principles (like equal access to information) with new technologies (like 3-D printers), putting in maker spaces and media production labs alongside bookshelves and meeting rooms. As I’ve argued over on bookmobility.org, these combinations make sense because reading and making actually have a lot in common. They’re both creative processes that take existing materials and combine them in new ways. Getting people engaged in those kinds of processes—through imaginative thinking, contemplation, hands-on problem-solving, and collaborative learning—is what both maker spaces and libraries are all about.

 

Taking that commitment on the road with scissors and hammers and 3-D printers and a great big bookmobile-like truck, SparkTruck serves as a laboratory for new approaches, as well as a reminder that trying new things doesn’t have to (and probably shouldn’t!) necessarily mean tossing old ones out.

 

After all, what would those vibrobots be without classically crafty pipe cleaners and tongue depressors? And what would a library be without the creative, participatory, straight-up awesome experience of reading?

 

SparkTruck schedule [sparktruck.org]

How to arrange a visit from SparkTruck [sparktruck.org]

SparkTruck YouTube channel [youtube.com]

 

Signature: --Derek Attig, bookmobility.org

More to read:

Sent by 2012 Boing Boing, CC.
You are subscribed to email updates from Boing Boing. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe immediately.
Our mailing address is:
Boing Boing
905 Wettach St
Pittsburgh, Pa 15122

Add us to your address book

CrunchyTech

Blog Archive