Sunday, March 31, 2013

The Latest from Boing Boing

The Latest from Boing Boing

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Imaginary Glorp Gum becomes a reality! Sort of!
Disney World Luau bowl
2013 Hugo nominees announced
Nevada State Legislature poised to take regulation of Burning Man away from state and local cops
Assyrian Dalek, ca. 865 BCE
New Bob Basset mask with added angularity
Embarrassingly obvious undercover cops take to Twitter looking for house shows

 

Imaginary Glorp Gum becomes a reality! Sort of!

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 31, 2013 12:06 pm

Artist Brad McGinty has a new website celebrating the fake history of Glorp Gum, best described as Bazooka Joe by way of Rat Fink.
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Disney World Luau bowl

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 31, 2013 09:49 am

Kevin Kidney and Jody Daily designed this beautiful Polynesian Luau Bowl for an upcoming Walt Disney World special event. It'll sell for $35, but the on-sale date isn't announced yet. Summer's coming...
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2013 Hugo nominees announced

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 31, 2013 09:27 am

This year's Hugo Award nominees have been announced, and it's a great slate! Congrats to all the authors, artists, fans and editors who are up for the award in San Antonio, Texas this Labor Day weekend. Best Novel (1113 nominating ballots cast) * 2312, Kim Stanley Robinson (Orbit) * Blackout, Mira Grant (Orbit) * Captain ...
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Nevada State Legislature poised to take regulation of Burning Man away from state and local cops

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 31, 2013 08:58 am

M Otis Beard sez, "A bill gaining support in the Nevada State Assembly would make Burning Man hands-off for state and county law enforcement officials, and subject only to Federal authority." Each year, the local sheriff has been jacking Burning Man for increasing per-head fees, and the county's conservative lawmakers have been passing silly-season unconstitutionalities, ...
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Assyrian Dalek, ca. 865 BCE

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 30, 2013 09:08 pm

From Wikipedia: "English: A large wheeled Assyrian battering ram with an observation turret attacks the collapsing walls of a besieged city, while archers on both sides exchange fire. From the North-West Palace at Nimrud, about 865-860 BC; now in the British Museum." File:Assyrian battering ram.jpg (Thanks, Justin!)
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New Bob Basset mask with added angularity

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 30, 2013 05:54 pm

A new piece from Ukrainian steampunk leather mask-maker Bob Basset. I like the angular forms here -- there's something a bit Roman in it, to my eye at least. DW new. Steampunk Art Leather Mask
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Embarrassingly obvious undercover cops take to Twitter looking for house shows

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 30, 2013 03:21 pm

Internet-savvy indie musicians organize "house shows," which are pretty much what they sound like: a fan lets the band use her or his house for a performance, and other fans come by and hear it. The shows aren't legal, but they're pretty fun*. Boston cops have taken to Twitter, posing as punk kids, trying to ...
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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 2013 Boing Boing, CC.
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Saturday, March 30, 2013

The Latest from Boing Boing

The Latest from Boing Boing

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South Korea lives in the future (of brutal copyright enforcement)
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Eun is a Mac Guy
Caturday
Fleetwood Mac's "Rumours," depicted in crayon
UFO memo the FBI's most viewed
Mr Unpronounceable Adventures, spectacularly weird graphic novel in a Lovecraftian/Burroughsian vein
Fake penis fails drug test
KISS/Hello Kitty TV show in development
Maine Zumba instructor pleads guilty to prostitution charges
Little Mermaid tights
Group whose Wikipedia entry was deleted for non-notability threatens lawsuit against Wikipedian who participated in the discussion
ATM skimming comes to non-ATM payment terminals in train stations, etc
Toronto Mayor Rob Ford about to lose his job coaching high-school football?
Interview with Wrong director Quentin Dupieux
A baby can be a funeral for a friendship
US Border Patrol uses horses to secure Mexican border
Lessons learned from YouTube's $300M "Original Channel" fund
Chocolate Bunny family (photo)
Bollywood Easter: Images of Christ in '70s poster art from India
IKEA-style vibrator
It's tin foil hats, all the way down
Why can't we prevent asteroid strikes?
Read the previously unpublished letters of Charles Darwin
Do GMOs yield more food? The answer is in the semantics
Zealous preacher bingo card
Minneapolis SkepTech conference, coming April 5/6
More evidence linking fracking wastewater disposal to earthquakes
Gas masks for babies, 1940
Ouya, $100 Android game console, ships to early backers
Apple's security problems

 

South Korea lives in the future (of brutal copyright enforcement)

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 30, 2013 12:13 pm

The US-Korean Free Trade Agreement came with a raft of draconian enforcement rules that Korea -- then known as a world leader in network use and literacy -- would have to adopt. Korea has since become a living lab of the impact of letting US entertainment giants design your Internet policy -- and the example ...
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North Korean leader Kim Jong-Eun is a Mac Guy

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 30, 2013 11:09 am

As Anthony DeRosa of Reuters points out, Li'l Kim appears to be using Apple computer products in the most recent round of state propaganda photo campaign. Stop laughing, says The Atlantic.
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Caturday

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 30, 2013 10:55 am

"That's the stuff: Ralph The Cat," a photo by Darren Sethe of Portland, Oregon, shared in the Boing Boing Flickr pool.
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Fleetwood Mac's "Rumours," depicted in crayon

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 30, 2013 10:50 am

Boing Boing reader @ayleph tweeted at us: "Fleetwood Mac's Rumors album cover, depicted in crayon. Found at Sonic Boom in Ballard." [that's Seattle, WA]. Click pic to grande-fy.
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UFO memo the FBI's most viewed

By Rob Beschizza on Mar 30, 2013 09:03 am

An unconfirmed report of a UFO over New Mexico is the most popular item in the FBI's online reading room, the agency reports. Russell Contreras with the AP: Vaguely written, the memo describes a story told by an unnamed third party who claims an Air Force investigator reported that three flying saucers were recovered in ...
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Mr Unpronounceable Adventures, spectacularly weird graphic novel in a Lovecraftian/Burroughsian vein

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 30, 2013 09:00 am

Mr Unpronounceable Adventures is a book of comics by Australian surrealist artist Tim Molloy in a Lovecraftian vein. But that only scratches the surface here. Molloy is incredibly fucking weird, and not always in a funny-ha-ha way (though there's plenty of that). The story loops around and around, almost making sense, almost following a narrative, ...
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Fake penis fails drug test

By Rob Beschizza on Mar 30, 2013 08:56 am

Police in St Louis charged 34-year-old Sydney Levin with using an artificial penis, the Whizzinator, to complete a urine test. The Whizzinator's been helping idiots get busted—including its creators—since 2005.
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KISS/Hello Kitty TV show in development

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 11:05 pm

2010's KISS x Hello Kitty clothing line has spawned a TV show about a Hello Kitty rock band that dresses in KISS makeup: Yes, I'm serious: Kiss Hello Kitty (working title) is now in development, and it's based on this line of Kiss x Hello Kitty products, which made its debut in 2010. The show ...
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Maine Zumba instructor pleads guilty to prostitution charges

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 29, 2013 10:01 pm

A Zumba aerobics dance instructor who ran a prostitution business on the side (while collecting welfare assistance) pleaded guilty in a Portland, ME court today. Alexis Wright's male business partner has been convicted of co-running the sex business with her. The plea deal means there will be no trial in which jurors would have had ...
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Little Mermaid tights

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 08:53 pm

Hot Topic seems to have borrowed a trick from Australian pop-culture leggings favorite Black Milk with a line of Disney-licensed Little Mermaid full-print tights. Hot Topic's version costs about 75 percent less than the Black Milk stuff (and no shipping or duty for US buyers) -- though I have no idea whether they're comparable in ...
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Group whose Wikipedia entry was deleted for non-notability threatens lawsuit against Wikipedian who participated in the discussion

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 08:13 pm

Benjamin Mako Hill writes, "Last year, I participated in a discussion on Wikipedia that led to the deletion of an article about the "Institute for Cultural Diplomacy." Because I edit Wikipedia using my real name, the ICD was able to track me down. Over the last month or so, they threated me with legal action ...
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ATM skimming comes to non-ATM payment terminals in train stations, etc

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 06:43 pm

ATM skimming isn't limited to ATMs! There are lots of terminals that ask you to swipe your card and/or enter a PIN, and many of them are less well-armored and -policed than actual cashpoints. Skimmers have been found on train-ticket machines, parking meters and other payment terminals. Once a crook has got your card number ...
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Toronto Mayor Rob Ford about to lose his job coaching high-school football?

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 05:57 pm

Critics of Rob Ford, Toronto's laughable bumblefuck of a mayor, will tell you that at least he's good at teaching high-school football (maybe the only thing he truly enjoys). So it's newsworthy that the schools for which he coaches are considering firing him, and he won't show up to meetings to discuss his misconduct. The ...
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Interview with Wrong director Quentin Dupieux

By Advertiser on Mar 29, 2013 04:38 pm

ADVERTISEMENT The following is a sponsored post: There's nothing quite right about this hilariously delirious clip from Wrong, which hits theaters throughout the country this Friday and is already available on iTunes, featuring a suspicious gardner explaining the impossible overnight transformation of an everyday Californian palm tree to an evergreen. Its one of the many, ...
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A baby can be a funeral for a friendship

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 29, 2013 04:38 pm

Photo: AlexSutula, Shutterstock Jeff Simmermon, who writes funny essays and does funny standup, has a great new piece up on his blog. Five of my friends have had babies in the last two weeks. The birth of a baby is supposed to be a happy thing, but it can also be a funeral for a ...
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US Border Patrol uses horses to secure Mexican border

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 29, 2013 04:37 pm

Erin Siegal "Immigration enforcement and drug smuggling continue to be top priorities for the Department of Homeland Security, and the Border Patrol's budget has swelled accordingly, increasing from just $262,647 in 1990 to over $3.5 million dollars in the 2012 fiscal year," reports photojournalist Erin Siegal of ABC/Univision, in Mexico. "They've added more agents, more ...
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Lessons learned from YouTube's $300M "Original Channel" fund

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 04:36 pm

Hank was one of the recipients of the YouTube $300M "Original Channel" fund, and recounts some of his lessons learned: * Spending more money to produce the same number of minutes of content does not increase viewership. Online video isn't about how good it looks, it's about how good it is. * People who make ...
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Chocolate Bunny family (photo)

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 29, 2013 04:17 pm

"Lindt Bunny Family," a photo shared in the Boing Boing Flickr pool by Paul J. "Leave them alone, and they multiply."
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Bollywood Easter: Images of Christ in '70s poster art from India

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 29, 2013 04:05 pm

My brother Carl Hamm (Twitter), who is a club and radio DJ and a collector of obscure but excellent global stuff, shares the images in this post and says: There's a long tradition of Indian poster art which was probably at its height in the 1970s but goes back many many years before then. Youve ...
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IKEA-style vibrator

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 03:53 pm

LELO, a Swedish sex-toy company, has produced an IKEA-style, assemble-it-yourself vibrator called GÓ’SM (what else?) that comes with its own Allen key.
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It's tin foil hats, all the way down

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Mar 29, 2013 03:50 pm

In 2010, scientists published a paper on conspiracist ideation as it applied to both climate change and the moon landing. This year, the published a second paper — about the conspiracy theories that sprung up in response to their previous research.
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Why can't we prevent asteroid strikes?

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Mar 29, 2013 03:38 pm

Asteroids: Yet more evidence that (as a society) we aren't very good at prioritizing preventative measures against long-term risks.
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Read the previously unpublished letters of Charles Darwin

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Mar 29, 2013 03:30 pm

More than 1000 letters written between Charles Darwin and botanist Joseph Dalton Hooker, including 300 never before published, are now available free online for your reading and research pleasure.
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Do GMOs yield more food? The answer is in the semantics

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Mar 29, 2013 03:21 pm

Today, on Twitter, I learned something new and interesting from environmental reporter Paul Voosen. Over the years, I've run into reports (like this one from the Union of Concerned Scientists) showing that genetically modified crops — i.e. Roundup Ready corn and soybeans, which is really the stuff we're talking about most of the time in ...
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Zealous preacher bingo card

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 03:10 pm

The Fuck Yeah Atheism blog responded to a campus fire-and-brimstone preacher by creating a Zealous Preacher Bingo card, turning Preacher Tom into fun for the whole school: "I created Zealous Preacher Bingo cards, with a few friends' suggestions for spaces. We gave out candy to anyone who won." Zealous Preacher Bingo (via Wil Wheaton)
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Minneapolis SkepTech conference, coming April 5/6

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Mar 29, 2013 03:09 pm

Next week, I'll be speaking at the SkepTech Conference, a new gathering put together by University of Minnesota students. The lineup features some great folks from the science and skeptic communities, including bloggers PZ Myers and Hemant Mehta, and Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal cartoonist Zach Weinersmith. Registration is free. Come check it out!
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More evidence linking fracking wastewater disposal to earthquakes

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Mar 29, 2013 03:03 pm

Here at BoingBoing, we've talked before about the fact that earthquakes can be triggered by things humans do — everything from building particularly large reservoir to, most likely, injecting wastewater from fracking operations into underground wells. After a 5.7 earthquake hit Oklahoma in 2011, researchers there began gathering evidence that is making the link between ...
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Gas masks for babies, 1940

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 02:03 pm

From the Imperial War Museum in London, a couple of incredible photos of nurses testing out infant gas-masks: "Three nurses carry babies cocooned in baby gas respirators down the corridor of a London hospital during a gas drill. Note the carrying handle on the respirator used to carry the baby by the nurse in the ...
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Ouya, $100 Android game console, ships to early backers

By Rob Beschizza on Mar 29, 2013 01:10 pm

Ouya, the $100 game console, is already shipping to Kickstarter backers who helped the Android-based project get going last year. For the rest of us, there's an official retail release date: June 4. Bloomberg: About 55 games will be available with today's release, according to [Ouya founder Julie] Uhrman. The cube-shaped player uses a version ...
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Apple's security problems

By Rob Beschizza on Mar 29, 2013 01:02 pm

At The Verge, Tim Carmody reports on Apple's seeming inability to get to grips with account security. "The conventional wisdom is that this was a run-of-the-mill software security issue. ... No. It isn't. It's a troubling symptom that suggests Apple's self-admittedly bumpy transition from a maker of beautiful devices to a fully-fledged cloud services provider ...
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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 2013 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:
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Friday, March 29, 2013

The Latest from Boing Boing

The Latest from Boing Boing

Is this email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser.
Florida polo tycoon has difficulty marrying his 42-year-old girlfriend in order to keep assets away from bio-kids, ex-wife, family of guy he killed in a hit-and-run
Eating out makes your children overweight
Airlines should charge passengers by weight, says economist
Listen to Neverwhere free online, then see it in person
Grouching about Google
When US money was nice to look at
Watch the latest video posts in our Boing Boing video archives
Groups across America call on Congress to fix DMCA
Laotian all-women bomb clearance team, "most dangerous job in world," to speak in U.S.
In photographs, North Korea "leaks" plan to attack US
Kickstarter to save the brilliant zine store READING FRENZY
How children become "cannon fodder" for Mexican drug cartels
Bill Gold, the master of the movie poster
Sri Lanka: crowd led by Buddhist monks attacks Muslim warehouse in Colombo
Zombie houses: 300K+ in America
How the amazing UK cover for Rapture of the Nerds came to be
Last week to subscribe to Mark's 3rd Quarterly.co mailing
Interview with Wrong director Quentin Dupieux
Cory speaking in Bradford tomorrow
Disneyland Dapper Day: when Disney fans dress up
Songwriting podcast with Richard Sherman of Disney's Sherman Brothers
FOUR MORE ASTOUNDING THINGS THAT BOING BOING READERS ARE DOING RIGHT NOW!
LG Monitor Gives New Meaning to Color Precision
Editorial board of Journal of Library Administration resigns en masse in honor of Aaron Swartz
Equality
What problem are we trying to solve in the copyright wars?
TSA screener finds pepper spray on the floor, gasses five other screeners because he thought it was a laser-pointer
Prisoners in Scotland are "watching too much TV"
Mapping Twitter tongues of New York City
Owner reunited with camera she lost in Hawaii after it washes up on Taiwan beach 6 years later

 

Florida polo tycoon has difficulty marrying his 42-year-old girlfriend in order to keep assets away from bio-kids, ex-wife, family of guy he killed in a hit-and-run

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 12:54 pm

A Florida polo tycoon named John Goodman has hit a hitch in his plan to adopt his 42-year-old girlfriend so that his kids and ex-wife won't be able to keep him from writing her into his will. The court says he failed to disclose important information, but there's no word on whether that will have ...
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Eating out makes your children overweight

By Rob Beschizza on Mar 29, 2013 12:54 pm

The Center for Science in the Public Interest reports that most childrens' meals offered in U.S. restaurant chains contain too many calories, salt and fat: "Most chains seem stuck in a time warp, serving up the same old meals based on chicken nuggets, burgers, macaroni and cheese, fries, and soda," wrote CSPI nutrition policy director ...
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Airlines should charge passengers by weight, says economist

By Rob Beschizza on Mar 29, 2013 12:47 pm

Reuters: "Bhatta put together three models for what he called 'pay as you weigh airline pricing.' The first would charge passengers according to how much they and their baggage weighed. It would set a rate for pounds (kg) per passenger so that someone weighing 130 pounds (59 kg) would pay half the fare of 260-pound ...
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Listen to Neverwhere free online, then see it in person

By Rob Beschizza on Mar 29, 2013 12:40 pm

Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere is one of my favorite novels; now you can listen to it free online on BBC Radio 4 and enjoy it in person at Robert Kauzlarik's stage production, which opens next month in LA after runs in Chicago and elsewhere. The story of a good-hearted Scotsman who finds a dreamlike alternative London ...
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Grouching about Google

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 29, 2013 12:17 pm

Andrew Leonard has a tick-tock in Salon explaining how and when Google lost its cool. "Google Reader is gone. Google is banning ad-blocking apps. Google Alert doesn't work. The Google backlash is on." [SALON]
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When US money was nice to look at

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 12:12 pm

US currency was beautiful, once upon a time, when it sported images of animals and symbolic statuary, rather than deifying its citizen-rulers by putitng presidents on the money as though they were kings. This 1901 $10 note (available on Wikimedia Commons in a 33.34MB, 6,454 × 5,784 JPEG!) is a case in point. United States ...
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Watch the latest video posts in our Boing Boing video archives

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 29, 2013 11:08 am

We've gathered fresh video for you to surf and enjoy on the Boing Boing video page. The latest finds for your viewing pleasure include: • Frank Zappa reads the dirty bits of Naked Lunch. • TIme-lapse of a particularly intense aurora borealis display. • The Shangri-Las perform "Out in the Streets" (1965). • Super 8 ...
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Groups across America call on Congress to fix DMCA

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 10:49 am

Boing Boing is a co-signatory to an open letter (PDF) to the House and Senate Judiciary Committees, calling on them to fix the Digital Millennium Copyright Act's ban on jailbreaking and unlocking your devices. This laudable effort was spearheaded by Public Knowledge: "It is important for Congress to remember that people are waiting on them ...
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Laotian all-women bomb clearance team, "most dangerous job in world," to speak in U.S.

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 29, 2013 10:44 am

De-mining workers from Laos are speaking in the US about the urgent need for funding of bomb clearance and survivor assistance efforts in Laos.
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In photographs, North Korea "leaks" plan to attack US

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 29, 2013 10:29 am

A map of the USA's West Coast, with caption, "Plan to hit US mainland." Photos in North Korea's state-run newspaper, taken at an "emergency meeting" Friday morning with Kim Jong-Eun and military advisors, show the leader signing an order for North Korea's strategic rocket forces to be on standby to fire at US targets. Behind ...
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Kickstarter to save the brilliant zine store READING FRENZY

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 09:59 am

Reading Frenzy, the astoundingly great zine store in Portland, OR, lost its lease. They need to raise $50K to reopen.
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How children become "cannon fodder" for Mexican drug cartels

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 29, 2013 09:51 am

Wired's Danger Room blog points to this new report [PDF] by the NGO International Crisis Group, which details how Mexican drug cartels recruit and coerce kids as young as 11 years old to kill. Narcos "have recruited thousands of street gang members, school drop-outs and unskilled workers" over the last decade, and the report claims ...
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Bill Gold, the master of the movie poster

By Ben Marks on Mar 29, 2013 09:32 am

It's rare that any of us gets to start at the top: Brandon Crawford's first hit for the San Francisco Giants was a grand slam, Tatum O'Neal's first movie, Paper Moon, netted her an Oscar for best supporting actress at the tender age of 10. It happens, but not that often. Rarer still are those ...
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Sri Lanka: crowd led by Buddhist monks attacks Muslim warehouse in Colombo

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 29, 2013 09:25 am

In Sri Lanka's capital, Colombo, a group of Buddhist monks led a crowd of hundreds in an attack on "Fashion Bug," a Muslim-owned clothing warehouse. "The attack comes as hard-line Buddhist groups step up a campaign against the lifestyles of Muslims," according to the BBC. "Five or six" journalists covering the incident were injured, including ...
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Zombie houses: 300K+ in America

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 08:46 am

A survey by RealtyTrac reports that America is home to 301,874 zombie houses -- houses that have been abandoned by their owners, but not foreclosed upon by the banks. They effectively have no owners, but their erstwhile owners are theoretically on the hook for maintenance and liability. Florida has the largest zombie infestation (90,556!), followed ...
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How the amazing UK cover for Rapture of the Nerds came to be

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 08:23 am

I'm really impressed with the cover of the UK edition of Rapture of the Nerds, the novel I wrote with Charlie Stross. But it turns out that producing that cover was quite a journey. Designer Martin Stiff was kind enough to share his notes on the process, along with all the proto covers he produced ...
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Last week to subscribe to Mark's 3rd Quarterly.co mailing

By Mark Frauenfelder on Mar 29, 2013 08:07 am

Quarterly.co is a subscription service for wonderful things. People can subscribe to a curator (such as Joel Johnson, Veronica Belmont, Tim Ferriss, Joshua Foer, Gretchen Rubin and others) and pay $25 per quarter to receive a box of surprise items selected by the curator. My first mailing included a number of "fantastic plastic" gadgets (shown ...
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Interview with Wrong director Quentin Dupieux

By Advertiser on Mar 29, 2013 08:05 am

ADVERTISEMENT The following is a sponsored post: There's nothing quite right about this hilariously delirious clip from Wrong, which hits theaters throughout the country this Friday and is already available on iTunes, featuring a suspicious gardner explaining the impossible overnight transformation of an everyday Californian palm tree to an evergreen. Its one of the many, ...
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Cory speaking in Bradford tomorrow

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 29, 2013 04:35 am

Here's details of the public event I'm doing in Bradford while I'm in town for Eastercon: I'll be at the 1in12 Club, as part of an event called "Can Technology Save the City?" that runs from 12-6. I'll be there around 1430h. Hope you'll come out!
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Disneyland Dapper Day: when Disney fans dress up

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 28, 2013 11:28 pm

Disneyland fans have created many of their own theme days, some of which I've been lucky enough to happen upon or attend -- Bats Day (goths); Gay Days, and more. But I didn't know about Dapper Day, where 10,000+ people descend on Disneyland and Walt Disney World in natty outfits and style their way through ...
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Songwriting podcast with Richard Sherman of Disney's Sherman Brothers

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 28, 2013 09:18 pm

Sodajerker, a British podcast devoted to songwriting, produced a great one-hour episode with Disney songwriting legend Richard M Sherman, half of the Sherman Brothers team that gave us everything from "It's a Small World" to "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" (and lots more). Hearing Sherman talk about his work is fascinating. As one half of The Sherman Brothers, along ...
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FOUR MORE ASTOUNDING THINGS THAT BOING BOING READERS ARE DOING RIGHT NOW!

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 28, 2013 08:09 pm

Last week, I put up a post asking BB readers to tell us (and each other) about their projects. You-all upvoted your favorites, and herewith presented is a list of some of the coolest things you're up to (there's plenty that didn't make the cut but still fascinate -- have a look). There's so much ...
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LG Monitor Gives New Meaning to Color Precision

By Advertiser on Mar 28, 2013 06:15 pm

ADVERTISEMENT This post is sponsored by LG Electronics. Discover the LG IPS Color Prime Monitor. LG's ColorPrime IPS LED Monitor is a must-have for anyone who makes a living or has a passion for graphic design, photography video creation, or any other design-related projects. That's because the 27-inch monitor has 99 percent coverage of Adobe ...
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Editorial board of Journal of Library Administration resigns en masse in honor of Aaron Swartz

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 28, 2013 06:13 pm

The entire editorial board of the Journal of Library Administration resigned en masse. Board member Chris Bourg wrote publicly about the decision, and an open letter elaborates on it, stating that their difference of opinion with publisher Taylor & Francis Group about open access, galvanized by Aaron Swartz's suicide, moved them to quit. "The Board ...
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Equality

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 28, 2013 05:02 pm

From the Boing Boing Flickr pool: "Equality," a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No-Derivative-Works (2.0) image from Rich Renomeron's photostream.
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What problem are we trying to solve in the copyright wars?

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 28, 2013 04:13 pm

My latest Guardian column is "Copyright wars are damaging the health of the internet" and it looks at what we really need from proposed solutions to the copyright wars: I've sat through more presentations about the way to solve the copyright wars than I've had hot dinners, and all of them has fallen short of ...
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TSA screener finds pepper spray on the floor, gasses five other screeners because he thought it was a laser-pointer

By Cory Doctorow on Mar 28, 2013 03:02 pm

A TSA screener at JFK pepper-sprayed five of his colleagues at Terminal 2 on Tuesday, according to the New York Post. The screener, Chris Yves Dabel, found a pepper-spray cannister on the floor and believed it was a laser-pointer, so (for some reason), he aimed it at five other screeners and pressed the trigger. The ...
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Prisoners in Scotland are "watching too much TV"

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 28, 2013 02:42 pm

The parliament's justice committee is concerned that inmates in Scotland's jails "have unlimited opportunity to watch television," and say "a reasonable amount of time to watch television is fair as part of a prisoners' relaxation time," but warns of the importance of establishing "guidelines regarding the appropriate amount of television viewing." [BBC News]
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Mapping Twitter tongues of New York City

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 28, 2013 02:38 pm

8.5 million geolocated tweets. Above: a map created by James Cheshire, Ed Manley, and John Barratt, who collected 8.5 million geo-located tweets between January 2010 and February 2013. Fast Company Design reports: "To build the image itself, they placed a point every 50 meters across the city. Tweets falling in close proximity were translated into ...
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Owner reunited with camera she lost in Hawaii after it washes up on Taiwan beach 6 years later

By Xeni Jardin on Mar 28, 2013 02:33 pm

Lindsay Scallan of Newnan, Georgia took photos on her Canon PowerShot during a vacation on Maui in 2007, and lost her new camera (in its waterproof case) during a night scuba dive. "The seas were really rough. There was a lot of sand stirred up. It was hard to see," she told HawaiiNewsNow. Over the ...
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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

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