Thursday, May 2, 2013

The Latest from Boing Boing

The Latest from Boing Boing

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Photos of filthy Walmart stores
Excellent DIY mailboxes
In one month the SFMOMA closes for three years for renovation
Stop motion movie made by moving individual atoms
JOHN WILCOCK: A Job at the New York Times (1959)
HOWTO play Tetris forever
The cult of Shadow of the Colossus
Topsy Turvy World: surreal kids' picture book
Clever, vintage covers for Orwell reissues
Kris Kross's Chris Kelly aka Mac Daddy, RIP
Infographic: how money corrupts Congress, and what to do about it
The Matrix, retold by Mom
Guantanamo attorney found dead in apparent suicide
Bloomberg publishes CEO-to-employee-pay chart
Dig the latest videos in Boing Boing's video archives
How Wirecutter's Brian Lam works
Notable new Vladimir Putin meme surfaces
PBS: The Movie, a PBS Meets The Avengers parody short
High schooler blows stuff up for science — ends up charged with a felony
Mozilla to FinSpy: stop disguising your "lawful interception" spyware as Firefox
White Men Wearing Google Glass
Inexpensive smooth writing pencil: Mirado Black Warrior
Rumor: Koch Brothers to buy 8 major newspapers, including LA Times
New Canadian $5 celebrates the space programme
In the Leech Library: Behind the scenes at the American Museum of Natural History
Disney floats the idea of Haunted Mansion-themed hotel rooms
Looking at the link between red meat, eggs, and heart disease

 

Photos of filthy Walmart stores

By Mark Frauenfelder on May 02, 2013 12:49 pm

I once read that people who litter not only have little respect for the world around them, but that they also have little respect for themselves. I believe it. So is it any wonder that Walmart -- which is owned by a handful of the richest people on Earth yet shows little respect for employees, ...
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Excellent DIY mailboxes

By David Pescovitz on May 02, 2013 12:41 pm

Excellent collection of DIY geeky and arty mailboxes. "22 unusual and creative mailboxes you don't see everyday" (via MAKE)
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In one month the SFMOMA closes for three years for renovation

By Dean Putney on May 02, 2013 12:16 pm

If you're in the Bay Area and like modern art, now's the time. On June 2nd, the SFMOMA closes to begin a three year long renovation. There will be some exhibits at other museums through them, but the main building will be under construction.
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Stop motion movie made by moving individual atoms

By David Pescovitz on May 02, 2013 11:41 am

IBM nanoscientists used a scanning tunneling microscope to push around carbon monoxide molecules to create this stop motion animation. The image has been magnified 100 million times. See below for a video about how the movie was made. "A Boy and His Atom"
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JOHN WILCOCK: A Job at the New York Times (1959)

By Ethan Persoff and Scott Marshall on May 02, 2013 11:21 am

Chapter Four concludes with a job at the New York Times travel desk, a bit of music from the Monk Quartet, and a rotten act from Norman Mailer.
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HOWTO play Tetris forever

By Cory Doctorow on May 02, 2013 10:52 am

Given a standard Tetris engine (which drops pieces in a pseudorandom order, has previews, and allows holding), this method will allow you to play Tetris forever. As always, the most fascinating thing about this is the specialized vocabulary used to describe the method: Worst case bag distributions such as H?XX?X? and H?XXX?? deserve a special ...
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The cult of Shadow of the Colossus

By Rob Beschizza on May 02, 2013 10:41 am

Craig Owens writes about the quest to find a "last big secret" in the mysterious, epic game Shadow of the Colossus. Time and time again he'd load the game, steer Agro towards this postcard-perfect view, and then dismount from the steed. While Agro trotted away quietly, he would carefully walk up to one of the ...
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Topsy Turvy World: surreal kids' picture book

By Cory Doctorow on May 02, 2013 08:42 am

TOPSY TURVY WORLD is one of the new titles from Flying Eye, the kids' imprint of London's wonderful NoBrow publishing. Like the rest of the line (recently reviewed titles include Welcome to Your Awesome Robot, Monsters and Legends and Akissi), Topsy Turvy World is brilliantly conceived, beautifully executed, and not quite like anything else in ...
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Clever, vintage covers for Orwell reissues

By Cory Doctorow on May 02, 2013 01:14 am

Spotted these yesterday (though they've been around for a while - see Mark's post from January): Penguin's done a bunch of George Orwell paperback reissues with clever and vintagey covers. The Nineteen Eighty-Four has a black mask over the title that you can scratch off (or leave intact), while Animal Farm and Books v Cigarettes ...
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Kris Kross's Chris Kelly aka Mac Daddy, RIP

By David Pescovitz on May 02, 2013 12:15 am

Chris "Mac Daddy" Kelly of Kris Kross has died. He was 34. Kris Kross's big hit, of course, was "Jump" from their 1992 album "All Krossed Out." And yes, they were the kids who wore their pants backwards. (Billboard)
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Infographic: how money corrupts Congress, and what to do about it

By Cory Doctorow on May 01, 2013 11:10 pm

Money wins Elections is an excellent, scrolling infographic that illustrates how money corrupts the American legislative process, showing that time and again, Congress has voted the way that the big money told it to, against the prevailing popular opinion. It's all in support of the American Anti-corruption Act, and it was created by Tony Chu ...
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The Matrix, retold by Mom

By Xeni Jardin on May 01, 2013 10:52 pm

Austin filmmaker Joe Nicolosi: "My mom hadn't seen (or heard of) the Wachowski's classic sci-fi film The Matrix. We watched the entire movie together and right after she told me what it was all about." (via Nikol Hasler)
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Guantanamo attorney found dead in apparent suicide

By Xeni Jardin on May 01, 2013 09:53 pm

Detainees at Camp X-Ray sit in a holding area with Naval Base Guantanamo Bay military police during intake on Jan. 11, 2002. Camp X-Ray is now an abandoned area. US DoD photo. Jason Leopold at Truthout reports that an attorney who represented detainees at Guantanamo Bay, where a mass hunger strike is ongoing, was found ...
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Bloomberg publishes CEO-to-employee-pay chart

By Cory Doctorow on May 01, 2013 08:59 pm

Alan sez, "Bloomberg got tired of waiting for the SEC to implement its own rule requiring disclosure of data on how many times the median salary the CEO makes for publicly traded companies so they did a little sleuthing of public data and a little averaging math and calculated the ratio for the top 250 ...
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Dig the latest videos in Boing Boing's video archives

By Xeni Jardin on May 01, 2013 08:47 pm

Rob gave our Boing Boing video post archives a sweet makeover recently. Among the most recent video posts you will find on our all-new video page: • PBS: The Movie, a PBS Meets The Avengers parody short • How to barf in space • A whirling maglev banana • HOWTO make a HAL9000 • Video ...
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How Wirecutter's Brian Lam works

By Xeni Jardin on May 01, 2013 08:40 pm

My friend Brian Lam, whom I recently visited in Hawaii, knows how to live—and work. He wrote a wonderful piece for Lifehacker that you must read. Snip: I recommend everyone either fix your job or quit it. The best thing I ever did was get out of news. There is an undeniable truth that when ...
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Notable new Vladimir Putin meme surfaces

By Xeni Jardin on May 01, 2013 08:27 pm

Meet The Putins [9GAG].
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PBS: The Movie, a PBS Meets The Avengers parody short

By Xeni Jardin on May 01, 2013 08:14 pm

Steven Hudson of Cinesaurus, who produced this excellent nerd short, says: It seems that we live in a world where more young people aspire to be future Kardashians and Jersey Shore-folk rather than scientists, teachers, and artists. With recurring threats of tossing PBS onto the federal chopping block, the final hope for our future rests ...
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High schooler blows stuff up for science — ends up charged with a felony

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on May 01, 2013 07:26 pm

A Florida high school student with an interest in science mixed together aluminum foil and toilet bowl cleaner as an experiment. To her surprise, the mixture exploded. Unfortunately for Kiera Wilmot, she tried her experiment on school grounds. It was a small explosion, and nobody was hurt. Wilmot was, otherwise, a good student with a ...
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Mozilla to FinSpy: stop disguising your "lawful interception" spyware as Firefox

By Cory Doctorow on May 01, 2013 06:45 pm

The Mozilla Foundation has sent a legal threat to Gamma International, a UK company that makes a product called "FinSpy" that is used by governments, including brutal dictatorships to spy on dissidents. FinSpy allows these governments to hijack their citizens' screens, cameras, hard-drives and keyboards. Gamma disguises this spyware as copies of Firefox, Mozilla's flagship ...
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White Men Wearing Google Glass

By David Pescovitz on May 01, 2013 05:24 pm

A funny Tumblr: "White Men Wearing Google Glass" (Bonus points for including Bruce Sterling.) (via Jason Tester)
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Inexpensive smooth writing pencil: Mirado Black Warrior

By Cool Tools on May 01, 2013 05:16 pm

The Mirado Black Warrior pencil is made in the USA from high quality materials, available practically everywhere, and, very importantly, cheap (hey, it’s a pencil, after all). The Black Warrior’s No. 2/HB graphite is darker and softer than standard No. 2′s and has a wax additive to make it smoother. The writing experience is noticeably ...
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Rumor: Koch Brothers to buy 8 major newspapers, including LA Times

By Cory Doctorow on May 01, 2013 04:38 pm

The Koch Brothers -- billionaire ultra-conservative puppet-masters and Tea Party funders -- are rumored to be in talks to buy eight newspapers, including the LA Times, Chicago Tribune, Baltimore Sun, Orlando Sentinel and Hartford Courant from the Tribune company, which is emerging from bankruptcy protection. Half of the LA Times's newsroom has threatened to quit ...
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New Canadian $5 celebrates the space programme

By Cory Doctorow on May 01, 2013 03:00 pm

I'm pretty fond of the design of the new Canadian plastic $5 note, which is much improved if you draw Spock ears, eyebrows and hairline on old Sir Wilfrid Laurier. The new Canadian $5 bill has just destroyed every single other piece of currency in the world (IMO) (farm9.staticflickr.com)
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In the Leech Library: Behind the scenes at the American Museum of Natural History

By Maggie Koerth-Baker on May 01, 2013 02:58 pm

This is the second story in a four-part, weekly series on taxonomy and speciation. It's meant to help you as you participate in Armchair Taxonomist — a challenge from the Encyclopedia of Life to bring scientific descriptions of animals, plants, and other living things out from behind paywalls and onto the Internet. Participants can earn ...
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Disney floats the idea of Haunted Mansion-themed hotel rooms

By Cory Doctorow on May 01, 2013 01:23 pm

After a Walt Disney World family holiday, Dr. James Martin was sent an online poll by Disney asking if he'd be interested in returning and staying in a hotel room themed after one of the park's iconic rides, including the Haunted Mansion or Pirate of the Caribbean, or a princess room. The Haunted Mansion room ...
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Looking at the link between red meat, eggs, and heart disease

By Mark Frauenfelder on May 01, 2013 01:22 pm

Two recent papers about heart disease from the Cleveland Clinic are making the rounds. The studies report that red meat and eggs cause heart disease because our gut bacteria converts carnitine and choline into Trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), a heart disease trigger. At Huffington Post, Chris Kresser has questions about the papers: [W]hile at first glance ...
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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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Wednesday, May 1, 2013

The Latest from Boing Boing

The Latest from Boing Boing

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Asdfaksdfl-Class Transorbital Skimmer has near miss with primitive Earth vessel
TOM THE DANCING BUG: Hollingsworth Hound - "The Sequester and YOU"
The techie novels of Nevil Shute
Homeless man's A/B test of generosity based on faith
"Oxyana," new doc on how Oxycontin addiction is destroying Appalachian communities
Design jargon bullshit: a Tumblog of greatness
Name-your-price SOPA history
You're All Just Jealous of My Jetpack: a collection of Tom Gauld's brilliant cartoons
Why do shark embryos eat one another?
"Peeping Toms" tumble into ladies' restroom
300 gallons of urine stashed in house
Entire fridgeful of drinks destroyed after poison scare
Game of Thrones S3E5: Through the fire and the flames
Supreme Court says states can limit freedom-of-information requests from out-of-state, Muckrock hacks around it with your help
Cell model cake
Ace of Base's Ulf Ekberg saw the sign
Pirate pancake griddle
EFF challenges bogus 3D printing patents
How Congress flies
Rumored Statue of Liberty face-recognition supplier harasses and threatens journalist
Just look at this whirling maglev banana.
Winners of The Webby Awards 2013
Video of recursive hand illusions
Keith Haring documentary by Maripol
SOPA's daddy is now in charge of government science funding, and he hates peer-review
Teaching TCP/IP headers with legos
Screwdriver car key
1963 photo on the set of The Dick Van Dyke Show
James Gurney's "talking portrait" of 17th Street Locos
Cute things made from pieces of carpeting

 

Asdfaksdfl-Class Transorbital Skimmer has near miss with primitive Earth vessel

By Rob Beschizza on May 01, 2013 12:35 pm

The BBC reports: "The Airbus A320 was making its final approach to Glasgow Airport on 2 December when an object passed about 300ft underneath it. The pilot of the aircraft said the risk of collision with the object, which did not show up on radar, had been "high". A report by the UK Airprox Board ...
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TOM THE DANCING BUG: Hollingsworth Hound - "The Sequester and YOU"

By Ruben Bolling on May 01, 2013 12:05 pm

Tom the Dancing Bug, IN WHICH Hollingsworth Hound explains the Sequester, and YOU!
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The techie novels of Nevil Shute

By Mark Frauenfelder on May 01, 2013 11:18 am

Last month I had a conversation with Dale Grover (co-founder of Maker Works in Ann Arbor, Michigan -- read his profile at Make) about the late author Nevil Shute. Shute is best known for the novel On the Beach (about a dying Earth after a global nuclear war) but we discussed a lesser-known novel of ...
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Homeless man's A/B test of generosity based on faith

By Cory Doctorow on May 01, 2013 10:58 am

Redditor Ventachinkway caught a photo of a homeless man conducting a clever exercise in behavioral economics disguised as an inquiry into the levels of spontaneous generosity as determined by religious creed or lack thereof. When I passed him he proudly announced "The atheists are winning!" (i.imgur.com) (via Glinner)
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"Oxyana," new doc on how Oxycontin addiction is destroying Appalachian communities

By Xeni Jardin on May 01, 2013 10:21 am

"Nothing here but Oxy and coal," says one of the subjects of Sean Dunne's new documentary Oxyana, which just won Special Jury Mention at the 2013 Tribeca Film Festival. From Capital New York's review: "The 'here' is Oceana, a once-bustling mining town in West Virginia, now decimated by Oxycontin addiction to the point where the ...
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Design jargon bullshit: a Tumblog of greatness

By Xeni Jardin on May 01, 2013 10:18 am

designjargonbullshit.com: "Driving brand equity throughout the brand portfolio, providing an on-going strategy to support growth objectives." "Our proven methodology includes the identification of what we call the 'nugget of truth' that exists in every brand." "Our digital department eat, sleep & drink digital, then regurgitate it into information." (HT: @notrobwalker)
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Name-your-price SOPA history

By Cory Doctorow on May 01, 2013 09:40 am

Alan sez, "Demand Progress, part of Aaron Swartz's legacy, has been working for a while on a collection of essays and thoughts by people including Aaron, Lawrence Lessig, Techdirt's Mike Masnick, and Kim Dotcom. The collection is now available in ebook and paperback form. You can even pay in bitcoins, if that's how you roll."
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You're All Just Jealous of My Jetpack: a collection of Tom Gauld's brilliant cartoons

By Mark Frauenfelder on May 01, 2013 09:30 am

My glib description of Tom Gauld's cartoons would be "a science fiction Edward Gorey." It's unfair though, because there's is only a superficial stylistic resemblance between the two writer/illustrators. To read a Tom Gauld cartoon or illustrated book (see my reviews of The Gigantic Robot and Goliath) is to be entertained, but also to be ...
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Why do shark embryos eat one another?

By Rob Beschizza on May 01, 2013 08:59 am

Tia Ghose: "[they] cannibalize their littermates in the womb, with the largest embryo eating all but one of its siblings. Now, researchers know why."
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"Peeping Toms" tumble into ladies' restroom

By Rob Beschizza on May 01, 2013 08:49 am

In Atlanta, a pair of Peeping Toms reportedly fell through a bathroom ceiling as they tried to spy on women below. The Atlanta Journal Constitution reports that the 26- and 27-year-old men are suspected of climbing up into the men's restroom ceiling area, crawling over the womens' side, then promptly falling into a lavatory stall.
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300 gallons of urine stashed in house

By Rob Beschizza on May 01, 2013 08:42 am

The police in Newtown, Conn., are mulling whether to file charges against a man who stored "as much as 300 gallons of human urine" in his home. For reference, writes local reporter Libor Jany, the average person produces about six cups a day.
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Entire fridgeful of drinks destroyed after poison scare

By Rob Beschizza on May 01, 2013 08:38 am

A San Jose woman was arrested Monday over allegations that she spiked bottles of Starbucks' orange juice with rubbing alcohol.
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Game of Thrones S3E5: Through the fire and the flames

By Leigh Alexander on May 01, 2013 03:00 am

The latest episode of Game of Thrones was, in my humble opinion, far and away the most exciting one yet. Fire, fire and more fire, fatherhood and impeccable crescendoes. Such payoff for book fans, but what do viewers think? Let's recap and discuss. I can't wait! We begin the episode right where the last one ...
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Supreme Court says states can limit freedom-of-information requests from out-of-state, Muckrock hacks around it with your help

By Cory Doctorow on May 01, 2013 02:06 am

Michael from MuckRock sez, The Supreme Court ruled this morning that states have the right to restrict public records access to locals, meaning one more hurdle to would-be muckrakers everywhere. Even in-state requesters are harmed: It means one more bureaucratic hurdle and another excuse for agencies to respond in paper rather than electronically. MuckRock has ...
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Cell model cake

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 30, 2013 10:43 pm

Canadian artist/photographer NicoleWilliam created this cell model cake for her BIOL330 class in 2010. I hereby grant her a retrospective A+. It even comes apart! Biology Cell Cake (via Geeks Are Sexy)
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Ace of Base's Ulf Ekberg saw the sign

By Rob Beschizza on Apr 30, 2013 09:56 pm

When I was a kid, I was the class clown and a bit of a troll. When Ace of Base's The Sign was a hit, me and my mates made up this story that it was really a coded reference to the Swastika, and why are all of you listening to this shameful Nazi music? ...
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Pirate pancake griddle

By Mark Frauenfelder on Apr 30, 2013 09:03 pm

Joe Sandor is looking for $13k on Kickstarter to fund his Pirate Pancake griddle project. It's a beaut. (I wrote about Joe's successful cast iron crepe pan Kickstarter last year). Pirate Pancake griddle project
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EFF challenges bogus 3D printing patents

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 30, 2013 08:37 pm

Earlier this month, the Electronic Frontier Foundation asked the US Patent and Trademark Office to turn down six broad, bogus patents on 3D printing that could pave the way for even more patent-trolling on the emerging field of 3D printing. They worked with the Cyberlaw Clinic at Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet and Society and ...
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How Congress flies

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 30, 2013 07:57 pm

You know how aviation is a spiralling horror-show of discomfort and bad service? Well, not if you're in Congress: At Washington's Reagan National Airport, they have their own special parking spaces—right up close to the terminal—that they don't even have to pay for. As Bloomberg Television's Hans Nichols reports, this perk costs the Metropolitan Washington ...
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Rumored Statue of Liberty face-recognition supplier harasses and threatens journalist

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 30, 2013 06:38 pm

Slate's Ryan Gallagher caught wind of a new face recognition software being rolled out at the Statue of Liberty. He interviewed a rep from Total Recall, who were reported to be representing Cognitec, the German company whose product, FaceVACS was going in on Liberty Island. Halfway through the interview, Total Recall's director of business development ...
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Just look at this whirling maglev banana.

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 30, 2013 06:05 pm

Just look at it. Mag Lev Banana (Thanks, Philip!)
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Winners of The Webby Awards 2013

By David Pescovitz on Apr 30, 2013 05:45 pm

Our friends at the Webby Awards announced this year's winners and as usual, it's a fantastic mix of familiar sites and also sites I'd never heard of but will now kill my productivity for the week. Here's a taste: Mental Floss won for best cultural blog, NFB took the Net Art prize for "Bear 71," ...
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Video of recursive hand illusions

By David Pescovitz on Apr 30, 2013 05:24 pm

"Screengrab" by Willie Witte. "None of the visuals are computer generated. All the trickery took place literally in front of the camera."
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Keith Haring documentary by Maripol

By David Pescovitz on Apr 30, 2013 04:33 pm

French artist and fashion designer Maripol directed a new Web documentary about her friend Keith Haring. There are currently three Haring exhibitions in Paris right now, taking place at the Museé D'Art Moderne, 104, and Colette.
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SOPA's daddy is now in charge of government science funding, and he hates peer-review

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 30, 2013 03:36 pm

Lamar Smith (R-TX) is the goon who brought SOPA to the nation. Now he's in charge of science funding in the House, and he's got some spectacularly stupid ideas for science as a whole. Stuart sez, "The new chair of the House of Representatives science committee has drafted a bill that, in effect, would replace ...
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Teaching TCP/IP headers with legos

By Cory Doctorow on Apr 30, 2013 03:16 pm

A Hal Pomeranz from 2010 suggests a great way to teach TCP/IP header structure to students: he builds header diagrams out of legos, then mixes them up and has the students reconstruct them. The use of color here really highlights certain portions of the packet header. For example, the source and destination addresses and ports ...
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Screwdriver car key

By Mark Frauenfelder on Apr 30, 2013 03:13 pm

Make a screwdriver car key for that Gone in 60 Seconds feeling.
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1963 photo on the set of The Dick Van Dyke Show

By Mark Frauenfelder on Apr 30, 2013 03:07 pm

The Dick Van Dyke Show is one of my all time favorites (remember the great Twilight Zone-esque walnut episode?), and this 1963 photo from Look magazine makes me happy. Shorpy has a high-res version.
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James Gurney's "talking portrait" of 17th Street Locos

By Mark Frauenfelder on Apr 30, 2013 02:58 pm

My friend James Gurney is the creator of Dinotopia, and he is a sketching fanatic. When I had lunch with him at Bob's Big Boy in Burbank a couple of years ago, he and his wife (also an artist) stayed at the restaurant after the meal to sketch street scenes. He just posted this excellent ...
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Cute things made from pieces of carpeting

By Mark Frauenfelder on Apr 30, 2013 02:48 pm

What are these? Even after reading the description, I'm not sure. But they are awfully cute. I'm adding these images to my swipe file for times when I need creative inspiration. DIFFA + Interface
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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.
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