« a day earlier November 2, 2004
November 3, 2004
a day later » November 4, 2004

Balloon-based haunted house


This charity haunted house was built by a cadre of leet ball00n hax0rs who built it entirely out of thousands and thousands of balloons. The site's a little hard to navigate and a little thin on background, but damn, there are some amazing pieces here -- well worth poking around.

Link (Thanks, Gregg!)

Mario quilt: lovely nerd folk art

This quilt was made out of 1.5" squares laid atop a pattern generated by laying a game screencap over a grid Paint Shop Pro 8. This kind of nerd folk-art is amazing: I wonder if Nintendo watches for this kind of thing in order to get ideas for future schwag? I would so buy one of these: hell, I'd buy FIVE and give 'em as Xmas gifts. Link (via Waxy)

Chinese innovations not found in the west

Great Globe and Mail tech report on "10 things the Chinese do far better than we do." Some are pretty namerican-centric (cellphones) and others don't take account of the fact that privacy is less of a concern in a totalitarian state (RFID-based transit cards), but overall this is a fascinating piece full of great ideas that someone should market in the west.
In Tianjin, a city of 13 million people, traffic lights display red or green signals in a rectangle that rhythmically shrinks down as the time remaining evaporates. In Beijing, some traffic lights offer a countdown clock for both green and red signals.

During a red light, you know whether you have time to check that map; on a green light, you know whether to start braking a block away -- or to stomp on the accelerator, as though you were a Toronto or Montreal driver. (That's probably why Montreal has a few lights with countdown seconds for pedestrians.)

Link (via Kottke)

Michael Moore "protect the vote video team" member's Ohio account

BoingBoing reader Dave Pentecost was a member of filmmaker Michael Moore's "video the vote" witness team in Cleveland, Ohio. Multiple teams working with Moore covered various US cities, shooting documentary footage of conditions at polling sites and keeping an eye/lens out for voting irregularities or harrasment incidents. Dave had planned to send some short video clips to BoingBoing for us to host and stream as they were shot on election day (with bandwidth help from other friends of BoingBoing). That didn't happen in real time as we'd hoped -- but here's Dave's first-person testimony of what he shot, heard, and saw in Ohio:
Slowness in getting tapes back from the field prevented my getting any video posted on Election day. It was also just chaotic enough that the video crews didn't know the importance of what they had witnessed and recorded. The general impression was that we were seeing more confusion and incompetence at the polls than actual manipulation or intimidation. But just around the time the polls were about to close, there was a report of Republican challengers and police at one site. A video team and our lead producer headed over to see.

The first report said that there were five challengers at a polling station where they were only allowed two. Our team had to stay outside and record statements from voters and the Democratic challenger, who told a peculiar story. Remember, these were all black neighborhoods.

Sometime around noon, eight white people showed up, claiming to be GOP operatives but refusing to show any ID. They said they were there to see the Republican challenger, but no one knew who they were referring to. Several of them came into the polling station and set up shop looking at people's documents and making notes in clipboards. When a couple of them came outside and someone asked them what they were doing, they said they were just delivering sandwiches, and that they had to go. But the same dark blue PT Cruiser had been seen driving around several different polling stations.

Our crew taped two of the people beginning to cross the street to the polling place, then noticing the crew and quickly turn around and go back to their car. They also drove up next to them in the parking lot and when they got out to try to talk to them, they sped off.

I had a glimpse of some of this footage last night when the crews came back, exhausted, wet and cold. Everyone was ready to go to a small party at the house of a local Democratic judge to watch the returns. I left the reel digitizing into my laptop and went off for the evening. At that point I had only seen a few other clips of voters who had been told they weren't on the list , were sent to another polling site, and often not offered a provisional ballot.

Today on the bus ride back to New York, what we had recorded began to come into focus. The filmmakers logged their tapes and found the most interesting material There were interviews with voters who were amazingly calm after the ordeal of trying to vote and getting sent back and forth when their names were not found on the lists. Young couples where only one would be on the list, when they had registered at the same time. Elderly people who were sent from place to place and then not offered provisional ballots. People who had normal ballots put into the provisional ballot box and vice versa. Voters who had received confusing or misleading information by mail or phone. People who had not been offered the required 2 more chances if they messed up the first ballot, and were instead given a provisional ballot. Some who were told that the provisional ballot would not be counted (who knows yet whether that will come to pass).

And one crew had been at the "PT Cruiser Gang" location earlier in the day and had gone into the voting room. They didn't know who the white guys with clipboards were, but they didn't like their looks and shot about ten minutes of footage of them. These were not blue-suited Republicans. They were twenty-somethings with short haircuts wearing black crewneck or turtle neck sweaters. One stood at a table examining voter documents with a severe look, while holding his pen in a "stabbing" grip and clicking the button repeatedly in a strange menacing way. His two male friends carried clipboards and wandered around, looking over people's shoulders. They talked to each other or to people outside with cell phones, and a short haired blonde woman came in to confer. When our team went outside they got a great shot of the PT Cruiser - a pullout from the license plate.

What to make of all this? Well, the expected army of challengers didn't show up, at least where we were - polling places that had been determined to be at risk, and had many Election Protection voluteers in addition to our teams. We have the distinct impression that a campaign of purging the rolls and discouraging the voters had been in place. As far as provisional ballots go, the people manning the polling stations were at best poorly instructed (a policy of passive negligence on its own) or could not be bothered. At worst they were part of a cleverly altered system that denied people the vote whether they were recently registered or had been voting in that same location for over 30 years.

The PT Cruiser Gang? Freelancers having some fun? Deniable operatives? Who knows. But the tape of these incidents that I put together on the bus is going to the Democratic National Committee as well as Michael Moore's group. In another era it would probably go to the Justice Department. We are also trying to see if some television outlet is interested (Nightline?) and we hope it will spark some action in voting reform and will get the Dems to tackle these issues and others before the next presidential election.

I wish I could convey the feeling on the bus today as we left Cuyahoga County while the bad news came flooding in. There was a nightmarish moment when we got calls from the Dems and Michael Moore's people (I assume - I was in a black funk, editing with my headphones on) asking if we had enough evidence for a lawsuit. Was it all on our shoulders whether Kerry conceded or not? Was there a lawyer among us to even begin to answer that question? Could I tell anything from the collection of impressions I was assembling on my laptop? This could not be happening. Fortunately for our sanity (and perhaps for the nation's), we soon heard that all the provisional ballots of Ohio would not make the difference. And what about all the votes that were lost when not offered the provisional ballot? When people gave up on running from place to place in the rain, looking for their name on a list? We'll never know.

A word about our Video the Vote team. You heard 1200? There were 20 of us in Cleveland. Yes, Michael Moore paid for our bus and hotel rooms.

But we are not acolytes. We are a diverse group of young and older filmmakers with our own interests and agendas, who volunteered our time, skills and equipment to try to make a difference. The tape we shot belongs to each filmmaker, with the agreement to make it available as this develops. We were astonished by the dedication of all the other Election Protection volunteers, and by the deep desire to vote shown by everyone we met. And we are impressed by the potential of a "Rapid Media Response Team" - maybe we'll get a chance to do it again some time, with better communications and closer access to bandwidth, so the editor (me) and feedpoint won't be clear across town.

And a word about the tapes. Once I've gotten some sleep I will post a short edit of the PT Cruiser Gang. We'll see what happens with the rest - moving testimonials by folks who just wanted to exercise their right to participate in the process. Now I can catch up on back posts in Boing Boing and get on with life in these times.

Dave, thank you.

Purple Haze

Reader Jeff Culver in Seattle says:

"I was thinking today about how the 'red v. blue' states graphic is really misleading considering the slim margins that the candidates won some of those states by, so I sat down and created the map that's attached. In the dozens of hours I've been watching the news I haven't seen one like it, but thought that you and the BoingBoing readers might find it interesting. I think it definitely portrays our fellow states far differently than the extreme way we've been seeing to date."

Link to full-size image. Nod also to Siege, who also thought of this months ago and posted a similar graphic on his blog at Nerve (subscription-only access, and I can't find the link to his post, sorry).

BoingBoing reader Bill says,

"In contrast to your purple map, USA Today has published a country map broken down by county that shows where each party won. It's an even more depressing sea of red than the full US map, but clearly shows how the city folk liked the Dems and the rural folk liked the Reps this time around. Population difference is slight, land area difference is huge."

Link

Also: see this county-by-county "purple map", which extends the idea in greater detail: Link (thanks to Eric Lechner and Michael Leuchtenburg, also spotted today on kottke)

MPAA filesharer lawsuits expected: UPDATE

Following up an this earlier BoingBoing post: The Associated Press and Variety (sub required) report more details on an announcement expected from the MPAA tomorrow regarding lawsuits against hundreds of movie fileswappers. The anticipated move would be significant because movie studios -- unlike the recording industry -- have not yet taken large-scale legal action against individuals.

Guy who is afraid of stonefish peppers me with questions

Some guy came across my account of moving to Rarotonga, and he sent me this email:
From: XXXXXX
Subject: rarotonga
Date: November 3, 2004 2:13:45 AM PST
To: mark@well.com

Hello.
I am looking at the possibility of moving to rarotonga and I have a few questions about stonefish I wonder if you can give me some information...

1. how many stonefish are there in rarotonga?

2. how many people have you seen get hurt from this fish?

3. of these, how many people died?

4. I've read conflicting reports on the internet about the lethality of this type of fish, some sites say you die in 15 minutes and have zero chances of survival, some say there are only 3 ambiguous reported cases, what is your experience about this?

5. I've read that there is no antidote in rarotonga, perhaps the information is outdated; do you have the antivenom now and if so do all hotels have it or is there only one place to get it?

6. Isn't there a project to exterminate all stonefish on the island?

7. What technique do you use to keep these fish away from the shore?

8. what percentage of stone fish actually hide under the sand waiting for someone to step on it?

9. what kind of necrosis have you seen deriving from stonefish puncture? was there ever a need for extensive removal of tissue?

thanks for your time!

Spammers react to election

Funny spam.
From: "Mia Wang"
Date: November 3, 2004 9:28:10 AM EST
To: Taylor
Subject: Bush Gets Re-elected
Reply-To: "Mia Wang"

With 4 more years of Bush coming you need some prozac. Get it here.

Trust me, it'll make you feel better.

ST0P
Don't those singers dislike playing carelessly?
Did Roy love working on the top of the mountain?
I didn't dislike cooking at home.
tomorrow i will wash my hair and go to the salon
--------------------------------------------

(Thanks, John!)

Dan Clowes Apple Switch TV commercial

clowesswitchWhen I was filmed by Errol Morris for the Apple Switch TV commercial, cartoonist Dan Clowes (of Eightball) was there, too. It was the second time I'd met him. He's really funny. I like his commercial, which never ran on TV. Link

Also, this from the Fantagraphics newsletter:

Clowes will write the film Backyard Resistance for producer Scott Rudin and Paramount Pictures. The film will center on a trio of youngsters who made a shot-by-shot remake of Raiders of the Lost Ark called Raiders of the Lost Ark: The Adaptation. Earlier this year, Rudin secured the life rights to the Mississippi trio behind the film -- Chris Strompolos, Eric Zala and Jayson Lamb -- after Vanity Fair published an article about them.

The three began the project while on summer vacation in 1982, finishing it seven years later, shooting on a VHS camcorder and using backwoods Mississippi locales.

Quote of the Day: Diebold CEO promises Ohio to Bush

In a fall 2003 fundraising letter sent to Republicans, from Diebold CEO Walden O'Dell:
"I am committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president."
E-voting machine maker Diebold is based in North Canton, Ohio. Via earlier news items published mid-2004 by CNN, CBS, Mother Jones, and others.

A deathly fear

An elderly French man has built a coffin instrumented with an alarm that detects motion. If he moves once the box is six feet under, the alarm goes off to summon help. In case nobody hears the call right away, the casket is stocked with food, water, and a mini bar. The gentleman suffers from taphephobia, a fear of being buried alive. Link

Forget Canada. I'm packing my bags for the blogosphere.

Snip from "Electing to Leave: A reader’s guide to expatriating on November 3" from Bryant Urstadt in Harper's Magazine.
So the wrong candidate has won, and you want to leave the country. Let us consider your options. (...) Perhaps the most elegant solution is to join a country that exists only in one’s own -- or someone else's -- imagination.
Could someone who renounced their US citizenship declare themselves a citizen of the Internet? ;-) Link (via Joi, MeFi, etc.)

A headline to remember

Never imagined I'd be reading this Reuters headline, from yesterday. Link (via Nick Denton)

What Would a Dumbass Republican Do?

Eric Lawrence sez: "My friend Rich Malley, creator of Thot4ThDay (a daily humor email, over 8 years and running), sends these dead-on thoughts:"
"WWADRD?

Dear Friends:

If the shoe was on the other foot, What Would a Dumbass Republican Do?

Get depressed?

Get down?

Feel defeated?

Go away?

Refrain from being an obnoxious pain in the ass, 24/7?

Temper his sense of righteous entitlement?

Mute his howls of indignation?

Question his convictions?

Hell, no!

Here's what a Dumbass Republican would do:

Act like a winner in a world full of deluded losers.

Refuse to let the "facts on the ground" deter his belief in what he's got coming.

Drown out polite civil discourse by braying his unshaken beliefs like a stuck pig.

Refuse to shut the fuck up.

Refuse to go away.

Wrap himself in the flag and impugn the patriotism of any who would question his moral superiority.

Wear a big shit-eating grin that gives the other side just a moment of pause as they lay their heads on their pillows at night.

Have a glint in his eye that says, "I may have a shit-eating grin on my face, but I'm just waiting for an opportunity to slip this knife in."

See this not as a defeat, but as an inconvenient mistake.

Friends, join me.

Do not accept.

Do not waver.

Do not shut up.

Do not give comfort with your distress.

Be an unrelenting irritant.

Be a dumbass.

Right now, attitude is everything.

Together, we can help each other bear the present while shortening the time - and it will come - when we prevail."

iPod Download is back!

iPod Download is an iTunes plugin for moving music off your iPod onto your Mac that Apple had removed from the Internet by means of a series of lawyer letters. Then Apple shipped a disingenous "update" to iTunes that contained a blacklist of disallowed plugins, including iPod Download, because apparently Apple knows better than you which software you should use with your iPod after you've bought it and paid for it.

iPod Download has been updated to version 1.1, and it works with iTunes again. Get it before Apple uses the law to take away your rights again. 1.4MB DMG Link (via Engadget)

Hawking getting a free software chair

The next rev of the firmware for Stephen Hawking's speech synth and wheelchair will be released under a free software license.
Communication through the use of this software is made possible by the pressing of a single computer button attached to Professor Hawking's wheel chair, this button being his ticket to interact, move around, write and speak.

As his disorder intensifies, he is looking to upgrade the software to combat the disease...

"I am developing this as an open source software so that scientists all over the world can work on this platform and modify it according to specific requirements," he added.

Link (Thanks, Dave!)

Watchdogs Spot E-Vote Glitches

Kim Zetter of Wired News files this story about reported e-voting irregularities. Link

Blackboxvoting.org files "largest FOIA action in history"

Snip from announcement on website:
Black Box Voting (.ORG) is conducting the largest Freedom of Information action in history. At 8:30 p.m. Election Night, Black Box Voting blanketed the U.S. with the first in a series of public records requests, to obtain internal computer logs and other documents from 3,000 individual counties and townships. Networks called the election before anyone bothered to perform even the most rudimentary audit.

America: We have permission to say No to unaudited voting. It is our right. Among the first requests sent to counties (with all kinds of voting systems -- optical scan, touch-screen, and punch card) is a formal records request for internal audit logs, polling place results slips, modem transmission logs, and computer trouble slips.

An earlier FOIA is more sensitive, and has not been disclosed here. We will notify you as soon as we can go public with it. Such a request filed in King County, Washington on Sept. 15, following the primary election six weeks ago, uncovered an internal audit log containing a three-hour deletion on election night; “trouble slips” revealing suspicious modem activity; and profound problems with security, including accidental disclosure of critically sensitive remote access information to poll workers, office personnel, and even, in a shocking blunder, to Black Box Voting activists.

Link (via /.)

Source: MPAA to file 200 lawsuits against filesharers tomorrow?

A source who asks to remain anonymous (but generally knows what he's talking about) tells BoingBoing that the MPAA is expected to file a number of lawsuits against movie fileswappers -- possibly as early as tomorrow, Thursday November 4. The number of lawsuits is expected to be in the range of 200, +/-. "They talked about this once before, but held off," he says, "and they've put out word that they're doing a big announcement related to piracy at a Billboard conference tomorrow."

UPDATE: The Associated Press now has a story out. Announcement from MPAA head planned for Thursday. Link

Semantic Web on mobile devices

I wrote a piece for TheFeature about a cool Semantic Web project using PDAs at Carnegie Mellon, called MyCampus.
MyCampus was specifically set up to develop context-aware mobile services for the university's community. The system runs on PDAs and across 700 WLAN access points located around the university, and it is used daily by 3,000 people to help them study, socialize, plan meals, attend events, shop, and engage in extracurricular activities.
Link

Canadian rip-off clone of MoblogUK

A reader writes, "MoblogUK is a free-to-use, Creative-Commons-licensed moblogging site that has been running for about 1 year. Sadly, it seems that a Canadian company are trying to cash in on MoblogUK's sucess by launching freemoblogUK. Please note the similarity in logos. freemoblogUK's domain name was registered in September of this year, so it's obvious which site came first. I thought this story might be of interest to you, especially because moblogUK in a non-commercial Creative Commons project, whereas freemoblogUK is an commercial entity." Link

Update: Rob notes a telling difference between freemoblogUK and moblogUK's terms of service:

"freemoblogUK may use, sell and/or share with its affiliates any information provided by you on this website, including your name, e-mail address, usage patterns, and uploaded images and text."

versus moblogUK:

"The last thing we want to do is to take ownership of your images - they're yours to do with as you wish, and if we want to use them, we'll ask you first. However, some people will just take your photos and use them to get rich - it's for this reason that we recommend you protect your images with a license: http://creativecommons.org

Best WiFi hotels

HotelChatter has done an excellent roundup of the best WiFi hotels in the biz, including Kimpton's (who will position a Linksys Wireless Bridge near your room if your signal strength is teh suck), and my favorite, the Holiday Inn Express:
Sure you are going to get a basic room, but usually at a low price, and if you throw in free wireless then most people can be happy, at least for a night. Most, not all (check before you go) Holiday Inn's have free wireless in the lobby and some sort of free broadband in the guest rooms. Depending on the Holiday Inn you may run into port blocking, and in general, a good rule of thumb is expect most of these free Internet services to come with some sort of limitations.
Link (Thanks, Mark!)
« a day earlier November 2, 2004
November 3, 2004
a day later » November 4, 2004