Come to the huge Bazaar Bizarre craft fair at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles on Saturday, December 16, 2006. Carla Sinclair (editor-in-chief of CRAFT) and I (editor-in-chief of MAKE) will be there to say hello. I think I'll bring my silkscreen setup and screen gremlins on people's clothes and other stuff.
Link
Craft and Make at Bazaar Bizarre in LA on Saturday
Come to the huge Bazaar Bizarre craft fair at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles on Saturday, December 16, 2006. Carla Sinclair (editor-in-chief of CRAFT) and I (editor-in-chief of MAKE) will be there to say hello. I think I'll bring my silkscreen setup and screen gremlins on people's clothes and other stuff.
Link
Behold, the sight of his noodly light.
One devotee of the Flying Spaghetti monster paints an homage in holiday bulbs: "For the eyes, I took a set of 140 mini-lights, disabled two of the colors, used electrical tape to make them into bundles and wired them into the sockets. The eyes can blink and fade in different patterns." Link (thanks, Geoffrey Kidd)
Mystery photo: man in top hat sitting on dead horse
The Sheboygan Press is asking its readers to help explain this unusual photograph taken in the 19th century.
In the photo, a dead horse lies in the street, roped off with string tied to stakes in the dirt road. A man in a top hat, bow tie and jacket sits on top of the horse, and people in the background are standing still, looking toward the camera.Link"I always just assumed it was taken as a joke or something like that," said Bill Wangemann, Sheboygan city historian. "I was never able to find out anything about it. What the story behind that (picture) is, I don't have the foggiest notion."
Gremlin Moleskine notebook
I silkscreened a red gremlin on the covers of these 64-page, 9cm x 14cm Moleskine Cahier notebooks. You can buy one for $6 postpaid (US only). This edition is limited to 100 signed and numbered copies. (Click image for enlargement.)
SOLD OUT! Thanks to everyone for ordering these! I hope to sell a new design soon. -- Mark
War on Terror board game
Link (Thanks, Mason!)Everyone starts the game as an Empire, with a couple of free villages and they can settle anywhere in the world. Although peaceful (we had to ban fighting in the first round) the 'politics' of the game already start to form, depending on what oil is discovered and how 'aggressive' the initial settlement choice is.
Send secret messages; fund terrorism; make deals; renege on deals; wage war; expand your empire; forge secret alliances; fund regime changes; kidnap politicians; be the terrorists
Empires then spread over the planet grabbing all available land, searching for the best oil and the most strategic borders. Some go for towns and cities, other spend their cash on extra empire cards, building up their political options. Maybe, if they're lucky, they'll get an early nuke.
La Très Sainte Trinosophie: 18th c. French occult tome
Bibliodyssey, a site devoted to rare old books and materia obscura, is one of my favorite blogs. Each page-load is like a peek into the most treasured recesses of an eccentric book-hoarder's stash. I have a tiny attention span and an aversion to collecting too many objects, so for me it's a dream come true. Here's a snip from today's entry, "La Très Sainte Trinosophie," which includes some pages of cool old magic code I don't understand:
The 'Cosmic Master of the Age of Aquarius' and mysterious adept, the Count de Saint-Germain, allegedly died in 1784. He was a spy, virtuoso violinist, diplomat, friend at the Court of Louis XV, adventurer and was said to be able to transform iron into gold. A veritable procession of people have claimed to be the still living Count de Saint-Germain since 1784.Link to full text of blog post, with lots of big juicy page scans of the illustrations inside this book."During the centuries after his death, numerous myths, legends and speculations have surfaced. He has been attributed with occult practices like snake charming and ventriloquism. There are stories about an affair between him and Madame de Pompadour. Other legends report that he was immortal, the Wandering Jew, an alchemist with the elixir of life, a Rosicrucian or an ousted king, a bastard of Queen Maria Anna of Spain, that he prophesied the French Revolution. Casanova called him the violinist Catlini. Count Cagliostro was rumored to be his pupil."Either the Count de Saint-Germain or Cagliostro is considered to be the author of 'La Très Sainte Trinosophie' (The Most Holy Three-fold Wisdom), from the latter half of the 18th century. It has been called "the rarest of occult manuscripts"1 and the only surviving copy is owned by the library in Troyes, France.
Reader comment: Neil says,
It's worth pointing out that de Saint-Germain appears prominently in Neal Stephenson's lovely "Quicksilver".Anne Stewart says,
If Saint-Germain sightings are of interest, it's also worth noting that he's all over Umberto Eco's "Foucault's Pendulum."
Sonic art weapon: Ravezooka
Snip from wemakemoneynotart:
"The Ravezooka is a musical weapon that shoots powerful "hardcore" sounds based on your target's distance from the instrument. Squeezing the trigger handle initiates sound and a beam of light. As the user moves the Ravezooka around, the frequency range being played changes based on the distance of the person or object in front of the instrument. The closer the target, the lower the frequency range."
Link to wwmna blog entry.
The Ravezooka was created by Benedetta Piantella Simeonidis and Lesley Flanigan. Here's their project page, and you can hear it in action at New York University's Winter Interactive Telecommunications Program show on December 17 and 18.
Anti-terror funds pay for mobile fingerprint scanners for cops
LinkColumbus, Ohio police just spent about $120,000 in federal homeland security grant money to buy 40 cellular-enabled fingerprint scanners which will allow officers to run a fingerprint of a suspect against 250,000 prints in the city's fingerprint database, according to the Associated Press. The department says the Rapid Identification Terminal (wi-fi enabled!) will cut down on crime since officers will no longer have to route a suspected criminal to the central office, where fingerprinting can take up to an hour. This doesn't replace that procedure but let's officers find out if the person they've stopped has outstanding warrants or may be lying about his or her identity.
Clockwork Insects
Mike Libby on the inspiration for his mechanical insect creations:"One day I found a dead intact beetle. I then located an old wristwatch, thinking of how the beetle also operated and looked like a little mechanical device and so decided to combine the two. After some time dissecting the beetle and outfitting it with watch parts and gears, I had a convincing little cybernetic sculpture. I soon made many more with other found insects and have been exploring and developing the theme ever since."
NPR Holiday crafts contest winners announced
The winners of the previously-Boinged NPR Holiday crafts contest have been announced: Link. Carla Sinclair (Craft) and Phil Torrone (Make) were among the judges. At left, Julie Jackson's winning homage to Stephen Colbert and his word of the year, truthiness.
Reader comment: Julie Jackson, creator of the winning entry, shares news of how the pint-sized Stephen is celebrating the NPR Craft Contest win. "He and his little 'elf friends' won't shut up about it." Link
Pirates of the Caribbean: behind the ILM digital effects
Link. Image: screengrab detail from the very cool "Real or ILM?" section of the site.The work of several Star Wars veterans (including VFX supervisor John Knoll) is being showcased in a special website just launched to explore the mind-blowing visual effects of this past summer's "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest." Interactive clips at this new site allow you to peel back layers of animation to see what ILM had to start with before transforming actors wearing tracking markers into astonishingly real characters.
Internet monkey proves holiday fruitcake need not suck
hi! monkey! is one of the internet's gentler souls -- if pixelated puppets can be said to have souls. The sweet-natured simian ("i'm small, i'm terry cloth, and i think i have a nice personality!") stars in a click-by-click cooking meditation on how to make a really fine holiday fruitcake. Link, very child-friendly. There is no ironic "gotcha" here, just a puppet baking a cake.More: monkey cooking latkes, hannukah celebration, christmas stuff, and... hmmmm... a visit with the truthiness elf, winner of the NPR holiday crafts contest.
Fun ad for books
I like this advertisement for dead tree books. Click the image to see the whole thing.Link (Thanks, Jason Tester!)
Gingerbread version of Carcassonne board game
BB reader Paul sez,
A board-gaming colleague of mine created, played, and I beleive subsequently ate, a full gingerbread version of the popular, and oft-expanded tile-laying game "Carcassonne". She has published the details including how long it took and llinks to lots of photos...the little gingerbread "meeples" are the best!Link to blog entry with links to photos and HOWTO infoz. Here's background on the game.
Jon Power points to more coverage on boardgamegeek and says,
Boardgamegeek.com is the centre of the board game universe and a few minutes on there will convert almost everybody away from horrid Monopoly and back into fun games like Carc. My club in York is called Beyond Monopoly!, we'll be meeting tomorrow to play German games all day. German style board games are the future. We go to Essen each year to join 150,000 boardgamers at the biggest show in the world. 4 days of board games in massive exhibition halls, it's unbelievable.
Cyber-freedom prize winners include Cuban hunger striker
And The two other nominees were:Guillermo Fariñas, "El coco", head of the independent news agency Cubanacán Press, began a hunger strike in February 2006 to demand the right for all Cubans to have access to a "free Internet". The authorities hospitalised him and put him on a drip to try to end his campaign, which was widely covered in the international media.
After he had spent several months in intensive care suffering from kidney and heart problems, the authorities told Guillermo Fariñas he could have "limited" access to the Internet. He refused, explaining that he could not honourably exercise his profession as a journalist by looking only at news and information which had been filtered by the government.
"El coco" only ended his hunger strike on 31 August after a brush with death and the loss of 15 kilos. He is continuing his work at Cubanacán and has become one of the leading voices among Cuban opposition journalists. He also still keeps the foreign media up to date with human rights violations in his country and in particular passes on information about intimidation and harassment of independent reporters. Cubanacán, founded in 2003, is the leading news agency of the new generation of Cuban journalists. None of its 17 reporters has the right to use the Internet or fax to send articles abroad. Their reports are mostly filed from public telephones. Since telecommunications charges are very high, the calls are mostly placed by collect.
Habib Saleh. Syria President Bashar al-Assad has made Syria into one of the worst ‘black holes’ in the Internet. He has set up systematic filtering of online opposition publications and sent his political police to mercilessly track down dissidents and independent journalists expressing themselves online. Writer and businessman Habib Saleh, 59, has paid the price of this systematic repression. On 29 May 2005, he was arrested at his office in Tartus, 130 kilometres north of Damascus. He was sentenced to three years in prison at the end of an unfair trial at which he was accused of “spreading lies” on the Internet.LinkYang Zili, China. Computer technician Yang Zili was sentenced on 28 May 2003 to eight years in prison for “subversion”. His “crime” was to post articles on his website lib.126.com, "the garden of Yang Zili’s ideas", in which he wrote about his support for political liberalism, criticised the crackdown on the spiritual movement Falungong and condemned the economic woes of China’s peasants.
Would you rent a MacBook for about $2 a day - for 3 years?
LinkApple France and French ISP Orange are hooking up to provide French consumers with a rented MacBook and 1 Mbps DSL for €60 ($79.50) a month. That works out to about €2 a day. (You can upgrade to 8 Mbps DSL for an additional €5 per month.)
The catch is that you have to sign up for three years, but that includes three years of Apple Care.
Louis-Pierre Wenes, executive director of France Telecom’s domestic operations compared this deal to getting a €150 rebate on the price of a MacBook (€1099) plus an additional two years of AppleCare (€319) — in that €35 that pays for the computer x 36 months = €1260. However, M. Wenes didn’t explain what happens at the end of the three-year deal. (There also appears to be a rent-to-buy option, but it’s unclear how that works out.)
Mysterious duck die-off in Idaho, new H5N1 worries
LinkThis is a story about a massive duck passing (at least 2000 have kicked the bucket so far) in Idaho. Experts aren't sure what is causing the die-off, but they are pretty sure that this is not H5N1. Their theory? Probably a bacteria. However, the main reason I submit the link? On page two of the story is the following text: "...They said it was unclear why a similar outbreak had never before occurred in Idaho. SIMILAR EVENT IN IOWA LAST YEAR. On Wednesday, officials outfitted with protective gear were gathering hundreds of mallard carcasses..."
Reader comment: Neil says,
CNN is reporting that the mallard die-off was caused by fungus growing on moldy grain like the earlier Iowa incident.
Xmas music: 2400 songs diced and resmushed into one MP3
Seeing as everybody is full of christmas cheer, glee and misery, i thought i'd add to that. I've put together 2400 christmas tracks into one 75 minute mix. 8 seconds of each song is spliced onto one of four tracks, with each track filtered according to frequency. It's not easy listening, and a friend of mine actually copied it because "i already feel like shit, so maybe with this i'll come out on the other side". (paraphrasing a bit here).Link. Get into the spirit of misery! Woe, woe, woe.
Web Zen: shopping zen
magic ponysuck uk
imaginary foundation
dna11
breath capture
facial feature stickers
i heart guts
we heart prints
process indicator
greggo magnets
the small object
the poster list
Shamelessly self-promoting bonus links: The BoingBoing t-shirt store, and the BB Digital Emporium.
Web Zen Home, Store (Thanks Frank!)
Imaginary Foundation's new shirts
I'm digging the new designs from surrealist clothier Imaginary Foundation, creators of the first in the artist series of Boing Boing t-shirts. The shirt seen here was inspired by Carl Sagan's profound insight that "Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known." Link
Pain-free family
The researchers studied six of his relatives, aged between 4 and 14 years. All had suffered many cuts and bruises, and injuries to lips and tongue caused by biting themselves; several had fractured bones without noticing.Link
This shows the importance of pain for our health and survival, notes Geoffrey Woods of the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, UK, who led the study. "Pain is there for a jolly good reason — it stops us damaging ourselves," he says. For example, the pain from a broken arm or sprained ankle encourages us to rest that body part while it recovers.
The children in the study had no such safety check, causing them to be both graceless and reckless. "One girl was continually knocked down in the playground and just didn't mind at all," Woods says...
The SCN9A gene encodes a 'sodium channel': one of the structures that allows electrical charge to flow into nerve cells, triggering a signal, the researchers explain. Without this particular type of sodium channel, the brain does not receive any signal that the body has encountered a pain-causing stimulus.
Cory's gone until 2007
Of course, the rest of the gang will still be here. If you want to submit a Boing Boing suggestion, use the form. I just delete Boing Boing suggestions I get by email, anyway, so this is always the right thing to do, no exceptions, ever, period.
If you want to talk to someone about doing business with Boing Boing, visit FM Publishing.
If you're looking to talk to someone about licensing some of my stories or novels, or commissioning a speech, article or whatnot, contact my agent, Russell Galen.
Have a great holiday, everyone! See you in 07!
Cory
Jargon watch: "Pizza upskirt"
Jargon watch: "Pizza upskirt" -- a photo of a pizza slice's crust, shot from beneath (coined for this photo). Used in SliceNY.com, a pizza-fancier's online community.
Link
(via Kottke)
Set-top box with guts does *everything*

The Hannibal Deuce Plus is a monster bad-ass set-top box. Built on a Ubuntu Linux box with the incredible Mythtv tivoing software, it does all the things that the other companies lack the courage to try. It'll rip and store your DVDs, it'll Torrent videos off the net and store them, it'll skip commercials and grab your pictures off your camera's memory card and organize them for you. It's got WiFi and Ethernet, and can run multiple tuner-cards if you want to record shows off of more than one channel at a time. Link (via Red Ferret)
Steampunk watch
This Vianney Halter Antiqua watch appears to have sprung from the pages of a Victorian scientific romance. No doubt it costs more than god, and it leaves me frustrated that all the cheap knock-offs are of standard, slightly grotty, all-look-same status watches. What this world needs is some forgers with a little style.
Link
Mario and Luigi rubber stamps
Self-inking pixellated Mario and Luigi stamps from ThinkGeek -- at $2.99, a steal. I have a feeling that these would be a little like Tobasco, the unbearable temptation to put them on everything within reach.
Link
(via Wonderland)

Everyone starts the game as an Empire, with a couple of free villages and they can settle anywhere in the world. Although peaceful (we had to ban fighting in the first round) the 'politics' of the game already start to form, depending on what oil is discovered and how 'aggressive' the initial settlement choice is.


Columbus, Ohio police just spent about $120,000 in federal homeland security grant money to buy 40 cellular-enabled fingerprint scanners which will allow officers to run a fingerprint of a suspect against 250,000 prints in the city's fingerprint database, according to the Associated Press. The department says the Rapid Identification Terminal (wi-fi enabled!) will cut down on crime since officers will no longer have to route a suspected criminal to the central office, where fingerprinting can take up to an hour. This doesn't replace that procedure but let's officers find out if the person they've stopped has outstanding warrants or may be lying about his or her identity.
The work of several Star Wars veterans (including VFX supervisor John Knoll) is being showcased in a special website just launched to explore the mind-blowing visual effects of this past summer's "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest." Interactive clips at this new site allow you to peel back layers of animation to see what ILM had to start with before transforming actors wearing tracking markers into astonishingly real characters.
Guillermo Fariñas, "El coco", head of the independent news agency Cubanacán Press, began a hunger strike in February 2006 to demand the right for all Cubans to have access to a "free Internet". The authorities hospitalised him and put him on a drip to try to end his campaign, which was widely covered in the international media.
Apple France and French ISP Orange are
This is a story about a massive duck passing (at least 2000 have kicked the bucket so far) in Idaho. Experts aren't sure what is causing the die-off, but they are pretty sure that this is not H5N1. Their theory? Probably a bacteria. However, the main reason I submit the link? On page two of the story is the following text:
"...They said it was unclear why a similar outbreak had never before occurred in Idaho. SIMILAR EVENT IN IOWA LAST YEAR. On Wednesday, officials outfitted with protective gear were gathering hundreds of mallard carcasses..."

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