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July 6, 2007
a day later » July 7, 2007

Taking Things Seriously, by Josh Glenn

My friend Joshua Glenn was the founder of one of my favorite zines, The Hermenaut. He edited a new book called Taking Things Seriously: 75 Objects with Unexpected Significance, which can be pre-ordered via Amazon. I've read some samples from the book and they're wonderful.
200707061509 "'Taking Things Seriously' is a wonder cabinet of seventy-five unlikely thingamajigs that have been invested with significance and transformed into totems, talismans, charms, relics, and fetishes: scraps of movie posters scavenged from the streets of New York by Low Life author Luc Sante; the World War I helmet that inoculated social critic Thomas Frank against jingoism; the trash-picked, robot-shaped hairdo machine described by its owner as a chick magnet; the bagel burned by actor Christopher Walken while moonlighting as a short-order cook. The owners of these objects convey their excitement in short, often poignant essays that invite readers to participate in the enjoyable act of interpreting things."
Link
 

Make a penny shell with muriatic acid

Picture 1-76 PopSci has a fun project that shows you how to dissolve the zinc in a penny, leaving only the thin copper shell. Link
 

Retro-looking painting for son's album

200707061332
My friend Robyn painted this terrific album cover for his son's band's second album: an E.P. called Cosmic Beats in Outer Space.

It's reminiscent of EC comics and Mad editor Al Feldstein's 1959 painting Moon Arch, one of my favorite spaceman paintings. Link

 

Gary Baseman's ChouChou show

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(Click on thumbnails for enlargement) Gary Basemen's first solo show in LA in two years is opening at Billy Shire Fine Arts on July 14, and runs until August 11. He says:
This time I think I am pushing the envelope even more with my little creatures. Basically, ChouChou takes all one’s negative energy and hate away, absorbs it, and excretes it as creamy gooey love.
Link
 

The internet is impurifying our precious bodily fluids, Mandrake


Today on KCRW's daily radio news roundtable "To The Point," host Warren Olney did a segment on Andrew Keen's internet-damning book "Cult of the Amateur," in which bloggers are described as "enthusiastic monkeys" who try to "steal away our eyeballs."

The "monkey" part I won't dispute, but -- he's dead wrong with "eyeballs," it's all about the BRRRRAAIAIIINNNNNNSSSS.

Mr. Keen has compared Web 2.0 to the evils of Communism (he slurs Lessig as an "intellectual property communist," and Steve Jobs is a "cultural Marxist," LOL). The core premise of Keen's book seems to be that conversational media is destroying culture, ruining the economy, and destroying the lives of "experts."

The book's a lot more fun to read if you replace every instance of "YouTube" or "MySpace" with "rock and roll," and pretend it's 50 years ago and you're watching scared old fogeys rag on Elvis and the Beatles. Or just imagine the whole thing being read aloud by General Jack D. Ripper.

I can't help but wonder if some of the bitterness in Keen's rhetoric has to do with the fact that the big dumb web crowds he so eagerly disparages effectively voted down the "content and community" Web 1.0 music dotcom he ran circa 1999-2000. I understand it crashed and burned after 18 months.

Along with Mr. Keen, I was among the guests in today's episode, as was Larry Sanger (Citizendium) and Clay Shirky, whose insightful essays tearing apart technoskeptics like Keen and Michael Gorman have been blogged here on BoingBoing before.

Olney was a generous host, and as usual, Shirky was the smartest guest in the room -- he was a lot of fun to listen to.

And you can listen to the whole episode here: podcast link (iTunes), episode rundown.

Reader comment: Gregory Soo says,

It's a tad ironic that Keen has little qualifications for cultural criticism, and is thus an amateur at the very discipline of his book deriding amateurs. Maybe the only thing Keen is 'professional' at is trolling. And, "natural born filters" is so true.
C.E. Petit says,
Here are my comments from a week ago on Keen; although our reasoning differs, we reach part of the same conclusion concerning Keen.

And I drink only pure rainwater.

Update: Huh, look at that -- Kevin Kelly debated Mr. Keen online. In 8 parts, no less! There's some really interesting stuff in here: Link.
 

Make's special Halloween edition

 Blog Make Halloween
All of us at CRAFT and MAKE have been busy putting together a special edition one-shot magazine called DIY HALLOWEEN 2007. We've got over 40 do-it-yourself projects to teach yoyou how to do everything from applying monster makeup to building a high-tech haunted house.

Here are a few things you'll find inside:

Headless Marie Antoinette costume * Mechanical ghosts and ghouls * LED jack-o'-lanterns * Creature makeup and blood-spurting wounds * DIY tombstones * Kid-tested haunted house tricks * A special "Ghoulbox" section with Halloween kits, tools, and gadgets.
Plus demonic decorations, hideous party snacks, and profiles of extraordinary makers and their creepy crafts.

It'll ship in late August but you can pre-order a copy now for just $9.99. Link

 

Intelligent design proponents champion Steorn's perpetual motion device

Over at ScienceBlogs, Orac reports that creationists are pointing to Steorn's alleged free energy device (which failed at its public unveiling two days ago, incidentally) as proof that "ultra-materialists scientists" are wrong about the laws of thermodynamics. According to the creationists, the fact that Steorn has claimed to have built a perpetual motion machine proves that evolution is bunk, too. Who can argue with logic like that?

Here's the comment from the creationist:

This is perhaps the best physical evidence I have ever seen against the absurd assumptions of materialism. The materialists are utterly convinced that "free energy" is impossible, but they have totally ignored well documented evidence of miracles (e.g. walking on water, reviving the dead).

Let me explain: Such acts would have required a great deal of energy brought in from apparently nowhere. The laws of thermodynamics as Hawkings understand them say this can never happen. In hawking's world-view reviving the dead is impossible because a long-dead body contains a great deal more entropy than a healthy living body. On the other hand, well documented evidence says these miricales happened. As scientists we must follow this evidence wherever it leads.

This is a perfect example of how ultra-materialists scientists deny legitimate scientific inquiry. It's hardly surprising that the dogmatic neo-darwinist nay-sayers are often the same people who deny that Steorn's perpetual motion machine is possible WITHOUT EVEN SEEING IT!

Link

Previously on Boing Boing:
Steorn has "technical difficulties" with "free energy" machine
Steorn's "free energy machine" to be unveiled today
More on "free energy" company
Company claims to have generator with more than 100% efficiency

Reader comment:

Jeremy says:

I find it funny that ID people are against the Laws of Thermodynamics considering they often use one of them, specifically the second law, as evidence against evolution in the first place.
 

Ape altruism

A new study supports the theory that chimps can be altruistic just like people. Children as young as 18 months-old also seem to help adults, even strangers, without any immediate benefit to themselves. According to psychologist Felix Warneken of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, altruism goes back as far as 6 million years ago when to the common ancestor we share with chimps. In a paper published in the journal Public Library of Science Biology, the Warneken and his colleagues posit that humans and chimps are predisposed to be Good Samaritans. From Science News:
His team conducted three experiments with adult chimps living on an island sanctuary in Uganda and two experiments with 18-month-old German children. In the chimp version of the first experiment, 36 animals watched one at a time from a barred enclosure as an experimenter in an adjacent room—who had had virtually no prior contacts with the animals—reached through the bars for a stick on the other side. The stick was within reach of only the observing chimp.

Most chimps snatched the stick and gave it to the experimenter, whether or not the experimenter offered a piece of banana as a reward. No assistance came if the experimenter didn't first reach in vain for the stick.

A similar trial with 36 youngsters yielded comparable altruistic behavior, regardless of whether the experimenter offered toys as a reward.
Link to Science News, Link to PLoS Biology
 

Wunderkammer crafter interview

On the Craft blog, Make staff editor Arwen O'Reilly interviews Jessica Polka about her cool wunderkammer inspired crafts.
 Blog Il 430Xn.8974868 Arwen: What got you interested in making sea creatures?

Jessica: I have, for several years, been totally fascinated by the idea of a "wunderkammer," or cabinet of curiosity, which was the name given to the earliest of natural history collections. A wunderkammer was quite literally the most amazing, shocking, and befuddling specimens of the natural world -- real and imagined -- jammed together in a room or ornate display case. The viewer, I imagine, was supposed to get the sense that they were beholding all corners of the earth at once, in one glance -- sea shells (once a rarity) displayed next to preserved two-headed lambs, saintly relics, and "unicorn horns."

I got my mitts on a copy of Albertus Seba's Cabinet of Natural Curiosities, and it was only a matter of time before I made the connection between the beautiful red coral branches pictured in it and a few forlorn balls of red yarn I had earmarked for armwarmers.

Link
 

Fry's appearances in Fremont and Sunnyvale CANCELED

I'm sorry to say that I had to cancel my trip to the Bay Area this weekend to present tips and techniques from my book, Rule the Web, at Fry's Electronics. If you were planning on coming to Fry's to attend, I sincerely apologize.

However, I will be at two Fry's Electronics in Los Angeles the following weekend:

Friday, July 13th, 7-8:30pm
Woodland Hills Store
6100 Canoga Ave.
Woodland Hills, CA 91367
(818) 227-1000

Saturday, July 14th, 2-3:30pm
Anaheim Store
3370 E. La Palma Ave.
Anaheim, CA 92806
(714) 688-3000

I hope to see you there!

Download the flyer PDF here: Link

 
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July 6, 2007
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