Tuesday, April 30, 2013

The Latest from Boing Boing

The Latest from Boing Boing

Is this email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser.
Chimp fight at the LA Zoo
Review: Sam Adams' Spring Thaw beer pack
Gooseberry Bluff Community College of Magic, a Kindle Serial
Brace yourselves, tick season is coming
Inner monologues — out loud
Guatemala: Rios Montt genocide trial resumes amid legal uncertainty, polarized political climate
Feynman graphic-novel biography out in paperback today
RIP Number 10
Giant binder-clip handbag
This history of the car in L.A.
Review: Cenoire Eluo Sonic Toothbrush
How to: Figure out what color dinosaurs really were
Mars Attacks Invasion: exclusive sneak peek at new card series
What ouija boards and military contractors have in common
The world's first website
What Google's self-driving car sees
Future Tense: Neal Stephenson and Tim Wu talk future, sf and tech
Gweek 093: Crime writer Duane Swierczynski
Brain Rot: Hip Hop Family Tree, Russell Simmons Slowly Builds His Empire
Necessary Evil - a triumphant end to the Milkweed Triptych where Nazi X-Men fight English warlocks
Portable watermelon fridge
Today is the anniversary of LSD inventor/discoverer Albert Hofman's death (*epilepsy warning)
Hitler's food-taster: "Every day we feared it would be our last meal"
How to barf in space
Gold ring in the form of a dinosaur eating a chicken leg
How much time should you spend automating a routine task?
What's big, corrupt, terrifying and worse than ACTA? TPP. Here we go again!
Minnesota taxman says real musicians don't tour or let their stuff be played on public radio
Icelandic Pirate Party lands three seats in Icelandic parliament
Guatemala: Genocide trial said to re-start Tuesday, April 30

 

Chimp fight at the LA Zoo

By Mark Frauenfelder on Apr 30, 2013 12:56 pm

Daniel Richter makes an appearance at 0:57. (Via Unique Daily)
Read in browser

Review: Sam Adams' Spring Thaw beer pack

By Rob Beschizza on Apr 30, 2013 12:37 pm

Sam Adams sent over its Spring Thaw variety pack of specialty beers. It took us a while to get to them—they're already rare on the shelves—but I'm glad we did, because it's a fun lineup with only a single dud, and I'd like to encourage more of you to send us alcohol. The standouds are ...
Read in browser

Gooseberry Bluff Community College of Magic, a Kindle Serial

By Jason Weisberger on Apr 30, 2013 12:23 pm

Gooseberry Bluff Community College of Magic by David J. Schwartz is the first Kindle Serial I've tried. Serials are one time purchases that are then delivered as the author writes shorter installments. They hold the hope of performing like a radio drama for me.
Read in browser

Brace yourselves, tick season is coming

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Apr 30, 2013 11:59 am

At Outside magazine, Carl Zimmer has a great long read on why the tick population in the United States is increasing — and why scientists are having so much trouble controlling both ticks, and the diseases they spread.
Read in browser

Inner monologues — out loud

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Apr 30, 2013 11:51 am

At the Brainwaves blog, Ferris Jabr writes about a fascinating project. Anthropologist Andrew Irving talked random strangers on the streets of New York City into putting on a headset and speaking their inner monologue out loud as he followed behind them with a camera. The result is something that approximates what it might be like ...
Read in browser

Guatemala: Rios Montt genocide trial resumes amid legal uncertainty, polarized political climate

By Xeni Jardin on Apr 30, 2013 11:35 am

Ixil witnesses inside the courtroom, Tue. Apr. 30, 2013. At center, Maria Sajiq of Nebaj, Quiché, Guatemala. Ms. Sajiq was among the survivors Miles O'Brien and I interviewed in Nebaj recently, for a forthcoming PBS NewsHour report. (Photo: Xeni Jardin) I am blogging from inside the Supreme Court of Guatemala, where Judge Jazmin Barrios has ...
Read in browser

Feynman graphic-novel biography out in paperback today

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 30, 2013 11:33 am

Jim Ottaviani and Leland Myrick's Feynman, a stupendous biography of Richard Feynman in graphic novel form that went to #1 on the New York Times bestseller list, is out in paperback as of today! Here's my original review from 2011: Jim Ottaviani and Leland Myrick's Feynman is an affectionate and inspiring comic biography of the ...
Read in browser

RIP Number 10

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Apr 30, 2013 11:21 am

Number 10 — a Yellowstone Park elk famous for fighting with other elk, grade-school volleyball nets, and R.V.s — has died. Estimated to have been between 15 and 18 years old, he apparently lost a battle with a vehicle.
Read in browser

Giant binder-clip handbag

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 30, 2013 11:04 am

Peter Bristol created this binder clip bag in 2007 and now he's looking for manufacturing partners: "The binder icon functions so well as a bag you can almost take it seriously. Constructed of wool felt and aluminum tubing." Clip Bag (via Super Punch)
Read in browser

This history of the car in L.A.

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Apr 30, 2013 10:52 am

After living in L.A. for a year without owning a car — an experiment brought on by a lazy reaction to his car battery dying — Paleofuture's Matt Novak has written a fascinating piece about the history of Los Angeles transportation. It's a history that includes doomed monorails, oil derricks at Venice Beach, and a ...
Read in browser

Review: Cenoire Eluo Sonic Toothbrush

By Rob Beschizza on Apr 30, 2013 10:52 am

Cenoire sent over its Eluo Sonic Toothbrush, for some reason. It's compact, looks like a candy cane-colored mascara stick, and vibrates. Powered by one AAA battery, it has a proper on-off button to prevent accidental activation, a replaceable brush head, and claims 23,000 strokes per minute. In use, unfortunately, it's clearly not the same breed ...
Read in browser

How to: Figure out what color dinosaurs really were

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Apr 30, 2013 10:38 am

Color is just a happy side effect of physics. So Canadian scientists are turning to The Canadian Light Source synchrotron, a particle accelerator in Saskatchewan, to help them figure out what color extinct duck-billed dinosaurs actually were. By putting a 70-million-year-old skull into the accelerator, they'll be able to figure out what molecules — from ...
Read in browser

Mars Attacks Invasion: exclusive sneak peek at new card series

By Mark Frauenfelder on Apr 30, 2013 10:30 am

To celebrate the 50th anniversary of its most infamous product, Topps is busting out the stops with an all-new Mars Attack trading cards series.
Read in browser

What ouija boards and military contractors have in common

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on Apr 30, 2013 10:30 am

The power of suggestion, your own expectations, and even your emotions can cause your body to move without you actively telling it to. This weird phenomenon is called the ideomotor effect. It's what makes ouija boards work and it's the mechanism behind $60,000 bomb-detecting devices that an American company was recently caught selling to the ...
Read in browser

The world's first website

By Rob Beschizza on Apr 30, 2013 10:13 am

Back up at its original URL courtesy of CERN: "Twenty years of a free, open web."
Read in browser

What Google's self-driving car sees

By Rob Beschizza on Apr 30, 2013 10:10 am

Charlie Warzel: "THIS is what google's self driving car can see. So basically this thing is going to destroy us all." [via Matt Buchanan]
Read in browser

Future Tense: Neal Stephenson and Tim Wu talk future, sf and tech

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 30, 2013 09:58 am

Slate, the New America Foundation and Arizona State University have kicked off a new podcast called "Future Tense," hosted by Internet scholar Tim Wu. The inaugural episode is an interview with Neal Stephenson wherein Neal and Tim talk about where the future has gone -- why we no longer seem to dream of jetpacks and ...
Read in browser

Gweek 093: Crime writer Duane Swierczynski

By Mark Frauenfelder on Apr 30, 2013 09:30 am

In this episode of Gweek, I talked to the terrific crime writer Duane Swierczynski. Duane has a new book out today, called Point & Shoot. It's the third and final novel in his Charlie Hardie series (see my review here). Next week, Dark Horse is releasing X #1, written by Duane. We talked about his ...
Read in browser

Brain Rot: Hip Hop Family Tree, Russell Simmons Slowly Builds His Empire

By Ed Piskor on Apr 30, 2013 09:17 am

Read the rest of the Hip Hop Family Tree comics!
Read in browser

Necessary Evil - a triumphant end to the Milkweed Triptych where Nazi X-Men fight English warlocks

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 30, 2013 09:01 am

With Necessary Evil, published today, Ian Tregillis triumphantly concludes his astonishing, brilliant, pulse-pounding debut trilogy, The Milkweed Triptych. Milkweed began in 2010 with Bitter Seeds, an alternate history WWII novel about a Nazi doctor who creates a race of twisted X-Men through a program of brutal experimentation; and of the British counter-strategy: calling up the ...
Read in browser

Portable watermelon fridge

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

Tama-chan is a portable watermelon refrigerator on wheels. The Japanese device retails for 19,950 yen (about $200) and can handle watermelons or similarly shaped comestibles, such as poultry, roasts, or severed heads. The device itself weighs 6.3kg, and charges from a car lighter socket. ポータブル温冷庫/The Portable Watermelon Fridge — Could It Be The Perfect Gift ...
Read in browser

Today is the anniversary of LSD inventor/discoverer Albert Hofman's death (*epilepsy warning)

By Xeni Jardin on Apr 29, 2013 10:24 pm

TIP: mouseover to animate; don't mouseover if you have photosensitive epilepsy. Five years ago today, the man who first synthesized Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) died at 102 years old. There's an informative Wikipedia article here, and the Albert Hofman Foundation website is here. The 5-year anniversary is the one where you take 5 tabs. Rainbow ...
Read in browser

Hitler's food-taster: "Every day we feared it would be our last meal"

By Xeni Jardin on Apr 29, 2013 09:54 pm

"Margot Woelk was one of fifteen girls who spent two-and-a-half years testing Adolf Hitler's all-veggie diet to make sure it wasn't poisoned." When the Russians captured her (and the rest of the surviving food-taster girls), they raped her for two weeks. [barfblog]
Read in browser

How to barf in space

By Xeni Jardin on Apr 29, 2013 09:52 pm

"How do you upchuck if there is no up or down? ISS commander Chris Hadfield explains what astronauts do if they have to vomit." More information on this very important skill for space travelers here.
Read in browser

Gold ring in the form of a dinosaur eating a chicken leg

By Xeni Jardin on Apr 29, 2013 09:43 pm

Just what you always needed, but did not know until it existed, and it exists now: "A super detailed T-Rex eating fried chicken leg," which is available in dark oxidized silver or gold brass and sterling silver. Endorsed by Zach Galifianakis. Has crystal eyes (the ring, not Mr. Galifianakis). A hundred bucks. [verameat.com via @llaurappark]
Read in browser

How much time should you spend automating a routine task?

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 29, 2013 09:28 pm

Today's XKCD really tickles me. "Is It Worth the Time?" is a handy chart showing how much time you can invest in automating any recurring task in order to save time, on balance, over five years. I am an inveterate automator of recurring task, always looking for ways to shave seconds. On the other hand, ...
Read in browser

What's big, corrupt, terrifying and worse than ACTA? TPP. Here we go again!

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 29, 2013 08:02 pm

Remember ACTA, the terrifying, secret SOPA-on-steroids copyright treaty that the US government tried to ram down the world's throat? Well, it's back, only this time it's called the Trans-Pacific Partnership, and it's limited (for now) to the Pacific Rim. The TPP negotiators are meeting (in secret, natch) in Peru to twirl their mustaches and cackle, ...
Read in browser

Minnesota taxman says real musicians don't tour or let their stuff be played on public radio

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 29, 2013 06:56 pm

Jon sez, "Minnesota Department of Revenue tells musical artist during lengthy audit: You clearly aren't interested in profit, as you've "allowed" your music to be played on Minnesota Public Radio, you have had enough years of touring, so there is currently no need for any further promotional touring, and you should be signed to a ...
Read in browser

Icelandic Pirate Party lands three seats in Icelandic parliament

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 29, 2013 06:21 pm

The Icelandic Pirate Party has won three seats in its national Parliament in the Pirates' best-ever showing on the world stage. They form a small part of the opposition to the "center-right" Independence Party (Americans, please note that the Independence Party would be considered socialists by present US mainstream political standards). One of the new ...
Read in browser

Guatemala: Genocide trial said to re-start Tuesday, April 30

By Xeni Jardin on Apr 29, 2013 06:00 pm

A brief update on the trial of former US-backed military dictator José Efrain Rios Montt and his then chief of intelligence Jose Mauricio Rodriguez Sanchez: word here in Guatemala is that the trial will re-open tomorrow in Judge Jazmin Barrios' courtroom. I will be present, continuing to blog the historic trial for Boing Boing. NISGUA ...
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 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:
Boing Boing
905 Wettach St
Pittsburgh, Pa 15122

Add us to your address book

Monday, April 29, 2013

The Latest from Boing Boing

The Latest from Boing Boing

Is this email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser.
In case you missed: Xeni's update from Guatemala on genocide trial
Meat from a 20-kb swamp rat: taste test
Huge head found floating in Hudson River
Gear Guide portable folding hammock
When trademark becomes a tool for stealing our language
Hear Alexander Graham Bell speak
Japanese folk music glitch hop
Bruce Sterling on startups' role in helping the global rich get richer
Video about Judith, the strange pregnant "barbie doll" from 1992
Pravic: new SF zine
Buildings built by bacteria
The Shouting Matches - "Avery Hill" (free MP3)
Why do governments get Internet surveillance so wrong?
Monsters and Legends: kids' reference book on the origin of monsters
Moombahton in Guatemala: house meets reggaeton meets the unknown

 

In case you missed: Xeni's update from Guatemala on genocide trial

By Xeni Jardin on Apr 29, 2013 12:53 pm

Today here in Guatemala, the genocide trial of former US-backed military dictator Rios Montt and his head of military intelligence Rodriguez Sanchez remains on hold after a series of legal actions involving various Guatemalan courts. Catch up on the latest trial news in this most recent Boing Boing update; archives of my posts from Guatemala ...
Read in browser

Meat from a 20-kb swamp rat: taste test

By Chris Metzler on Apr 29, 2013 12:48 pm

Rodents of Unusual Size do exist. We know because we just ate one. Here's how it happened.
Read in browser

Huge head found floating in Hudson River

By David Pescovitz on Apr 29, 2013 12:47 pm

Did you lose your head? The crew team of Pouhkeepsie, New York's Marist College spotted this seven foot sculpture floating in the Hudson River last week. The men's crew head coach described the scene as "something out of a post-apocalyptic movie." They dragged it to shore but nobody has called to claim it. (Poughkeepsie Journal)
Read in browser

Gear Guide portable folding hammock

By Jason Weisberger on Apr 29, 2013 12:41 pm

This folding hammock is really great!
Read in browser

When trademark becomes a tool for stealing our language

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 29, 2013 12:35 pm

My latest Guardian column is "Trademarks: the good, the bad and the ugly," and it looks at why trademark, at its best, does something vital -- but how trademark can be abused to steal common words from our language and turn them into a twisted kind of pseudo-property. Trademark lawyers have convinced their clients that ...
Read in browser

Hear Alexander Graham Bell speak

By David Pescovitz on Apr 29, 2013 12:32 pm

The voice you can hear above is Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone. Bell's voice, not likely heard anywhere since he died in 1922, was retrieved from a wax-and-cardboard disc recorded on April 15, 1885 and recently "played" for the first time in more than a century. That's the disc above, looking strangely similar ...
Read in browser

Japanese folk music glitch hop

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 29, 2013 12:14 pm

Daniel Ryan describes his music as "a mix of Japanese folk music and glitch hop." This isn't normally my sort of thing -- I pretty much only listen to music with words -- but I played this one three times in a row this morning. There's a lot of clever stuff going on here that ...
Read in browser

Bruce Sterling on startups' role in helping the global rich get richer

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 29, 2013 12:09 pm

Bruce Sterling's speech from NEXT Berlin is a blast of cold air on the themes of startup life, disruption, and global collapse. Bruce excoriates the startup world for its complicity with the conspiracy of the global investor class to vastly increase the wealth of a tiny minority, and describes the role that "design fiction" has ...
Read in browser

Video about Judith, the strange pregnant "barbie doll" from 1992

By David Pescovitz on Apr 29, 2013 12:04 pm

Attaboy of Hi-Fructose Magazine started a new video series called "They Actually Made That!" to showcase strange toys from history. This episode is about Judith, a pregnant Barbie knock-off, complete with spring-loaded baby. And if you really want your own Judith to play with, here you go!
Read in browser

Pravic: new SF zine

By David Pescovitz on Apr 29, 2013 11:49 am

Pravic is a new science fiction zine edited by David "Total Dick-Head" Gill and Nathaniel K. Miller. The copy machine just spit out the second issue, featuring fiction by Rudy Rucker, Robert Onopa, Cal Godot, and Gill. Also, a special bonus rumination: "Are The Melvins sci-fi?" Single print copies are $3 to your door or ...
Read in browser

Buildings built by bacteria

By David Pescovitz on Apr 29, 2013 11:32 am

Over at Fast Company, our pal Chris Arkenberg wrote about how advances in synthetic biology and biomimicry could someday transform how we build our built environments: Innovations emerging across the disciplines of additive manufacturing, synthetic biology, swarm robotics, and architecture suggest a future scenario when buildings may be designed using libraries of biological templates and ...
Read in browser

The Shouting Matches - "Avery Hill" (free MP3)

By Amy Seidenwurm on Apr 29, 2013 11:06 am

Sound it Out # 47: The Shouting Matches - "Avery Hill" (MP3) Do you, like me, have a secret love for straight-ahead 70's rock? If so, that means we can enjoy together the blues guitar and gruff vocals of The Shouting Matches. The singer and songwriter of The Shouting Matches is Justin Vernon, who you ...
Read in browser

Why do governments get Internet surveillance so wrong?

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 29, 2013 09:36 am

The UK Open Rights Group has just published "Why the Snoopers' Charter is the wrong approach: A call for targeted and accountable investigatory powers," a digital paper on why and how governments go terribly wrong with Internet surveillance proposals, and what a reasonable and accountable form of surveillance would look like. Jim Killock from ORG ...
Read in browser

Monsters and Legends: kids' reference book on the origin of monsters

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 29, 2013 05:55 am

Monsters and Legends is part of the fabulous debut lineup of titles from Flying Eye, a kids' imprint spun out of London's NoBrow (they're the publishers of recently reviewed books like Welcome to Your Awesome Robot and Akissi). The book, written by Davide Cali and illustrated by Garbiella Giandelli, is a fascinating reference work for ...
Read in browser

Moombahton in Guatemala: house meets reggaeton meets the unknown

By Xeni Jardin on Apr 28, 2013 01:09 pm

DJ Wicho Lopez is the best-known local ambassador of one of the more interesting musical genres to take root here in Guatemala of late: moombahton, a mix of house and reggaeton and whatever else the DJ feels like throwing in.
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 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:
Boing Boing
905 Wettach St
Pittsburgh, Pa 15122

Add us to your address book

Sunday, April 28, 2013

The Latest from Boing Boing

The Latest from Boing Boing

Is this email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser.
MPAA executive admits to tampering with key evidence in Finnish topsite trial
HOWTO make a spiral oak staircase out of cheap IKEA countertops
20-foot dinosaur made from balloons
Building a Human: new retrofuturist short by Robert Popper and Peter Serafinowicz
Guatemala: Genocide trial may soon restart; Obama to meet with Central American leaders
Apple won't fix your computer if you smoke near it
HOWTO make a magnetic detachable stapler for center-stapled booklets and the like
Pirate Cinema up for Canada's Aurora Award

 

MPAA executive admits to tampering with key evidence in Finnish topsite trial

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 28, 2013 09:06 am

In Finland, a long-running prosecution of six men who were accused of running a piracy "topsite" ended with disappointment for the big rightsholder groups when two men were acquitted and the remaining four got comparatively mild sentences. Now, TorrentFreak sheds some light on the situation with the revelation that the prosecution was forced to admit, ...
Read in browser

HOWTO make a spiral oak staircase out of cheap IKEA countertops

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 27, 2013 08:41 pm

Bryce Phelps made himself a beautiful oak spiral staircase and saved a ton of money by cutting up cheap IKEA oak countertops for the treads: I went with a 4" steel pipe from the local steel yard buying 18'. Also purchased some angle and flat steel to frame out the stairs. My treads needed to ...
Read in browser

20-foot dinosaur made from balloons

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 27, 2013 06:38 pm

This 20-foot-tall acrocanthosaurus is made out of twisted-together balloons. It was created over four days by Larry Moss and Kelly Cheatle's company Airgami for the lobby of the Virgina Museum of Natural History. airigami (headed by larry moss) has completed a 20-foot long acrocanthosaurus--a dinosaur from the early cretaceous period. this is not the first ...
Read in browser

Building a Human: new retrofuturist short by Robert Popper and Peter Serafinowicz

By Xeni Jardin on Apr 27, 2013 06:10 pm

Robert Popper (electrocuted) and Peter Serafinowicz (electrocuted) are back with a new "instructional film made by The Visitors for Human Collaborators on Edité-Frignim (Earth)."  Markets of Britain, a short film by Lee Titt Peter Serafinowicz has a new book out Looking back at Look Around You with Popper and Serafinowicz ... Peter Serafinowicz: Boing Boing ...
Read in browser

Guatemala: Genocide trial may soon restart; Obama to meet with Central American leaders

By Xeni Jardin on Apr 27, 2013 05:28 pm

PHOTO: James Rodríguez/mimundo.org. "Protest demanding continuation of Genocide trial aganst Rios Montt." A brief Saturday update from Guatemala, where the genocide trial of former US-backed military dictator Rios Montt and his head of military intelligence Rodriguez Sanchez has been on hold after a series of legal actions involving various Guatemalan courts. In case you're just ...
Read in browser

Apple won't fix your computer if you smoke near it

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 27, 2013 05:21 pm

Consumerist's Laura Northrup rounds up several years' worth of stories from Apple customers who say they were denied warranty support on their computers because they'd smoked around them. As an annoying ex-smoker, I can sympathize with a tech who doesn't want to work on a machine that smells like an old ashtray, but that's what ...
Read in browser

HOWTO make a magnetic detachable stapler for center-stapled booklets and the like

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 27, 2013 03:14 pm

On Instructables, DIYHacksAndHowTos has a great method for separating a cheap stapler and sticking magnets on both halves, enabling you to center-staple booklets and the like. Every year or two, I do something zine-like that requires this sort of thing, and I always end up wasting money on a long-reach stapler that's always lost by ...
Read in browser

Pirate Cinema up for Canada's Aurora Award

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 27, 2013 01:36 pm

The 2013 Prix Aurora Award ballot has been announced, and I'm delighted to see that my novel Pirate Cinema is up for the prize in the Young Adult category. The Auroras are a people's choice award given for Canadian science fiction and fantasy, and I'm delighted to be recognised in the land of my birth! ...
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 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:
Boing Boing
905 Wettach St
Pittsburgh, Pa 15122

Add us to your address book

CrunchyTech

Blog Archive