FreeCulture.org : This is the "National Organization" as we refer to it. It's basically a good place to see who is doing what else in the Free Culture world. I'm on the board, but it's just a title -- local chapters are really where the action is at.Link (Thanks, Fred!)Free Culture Chapters Around the World : See all the other schools where chapters are located. FreeCulture.org has a discussion e-mail list, and an announcements list.If you're looking to debate and talk about Free Culture and these issues on campus, the discussion list is probably the best place in the world for that. Sign up for the announcements list as it's a good place to learn about Free Culture news before it hits the media. Creative Commons, EFF, The Free Software Foundation, and Public Knowledge are the big institutional players in our world, and many people working in the free culture movement either work with them, for them, or around them. Check out their sites for more information about what they do.

The latest IT Crowd -- season two, episode three -- aired last night, and featured a milk-nose-snortingly funny parody of the pre-show anti-piracy ads you get in movie theatres. I'm downloading the torrent right now (they don't air The IT Crowd in China, where I am this week, and Channel 4's streaming service won't run on Linux, or to IP addresses out of the UK), and can't wait to see it.
The IT Crowd is my favorite new TV show -- barring The Daily Show -- of the decade, brilliant geek humor that rewards multiple viewings (as I discovered when I bought the Season One DVD and checked out the leet subtitles). Torrent link, Link to anti-piracy PSA parody on YouTube (Thanks, Justin, Ryan, and Iris!)
(Disclosure: I was an unpaid consultant on season one of The IT Crowd)
See also:
IT Crowd Season 2, Episode 2 -- keyboard-destroying nerd sitcom
The IT Crowd -- season two, episode one

Naomi Klein (No Logo) and Alfonso Cuarón and Jonás Cuarón (Children of Men) have created a short film to accompany her latest book, "The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism," whose thesis is that present-day global capitalism took hold when its advocates learned to exploit disasters. After a disaster (war, tsunami, terrorist attack), you can push your agenda for worsening labor conditions, looser regulation, and pocket-lining exercises (Enron, Halliburton) while the reeling, disaster-struck population of the world has its attention elsewhere.
Klein attributes this technique to Milton Friedman, who is reported to have said that "only a crisis -- real or perceived -- produces real change." She connects this idea to the fundamental notion underpinning CIA torture techniques (as reported in CIA interrogation manuals from 1963 and 1983) -- to produce a state of shock in which the victim is out of control of her faculties, a "suspended animation" that can be exploited to get victims to do things that violate their own ethics or beliefs.
The Cuaróns' filmmaking is superb, as is Klein's writing. This is a chilling and powerful 7-minute film, and it made me want to pick up the book as soon as possible. Link to video, Link to The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism (Thanks, Csims!)

(Polar bear photo ganked from ucumari's incredible set on Flickr. Found mah bukkit.)
The Arctic ice cap has collapsed at an unprecedented rate this summer and levels of sea ice in the region now stand at a record low, scientists said last night. Experts said they were "stunned" by the loss of ice, with an area almost twice as big as Britain disappearing in the last week alone. So much ice has melted this summer that the north-west passage across the top of Canada is fully navigable, and observers say the north-east passage along Russia's Arctic coast could open later this month. If the increased rate of melting continues, the summertime Arctic could be totally free of ice by 2030.
Two-thirds of the world’s polar bears will disappear by 2050, even under moderate projections for shrinking summer sea ice caused by greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, government scientists reported on Friday.
About 40 percent of the floating ice that normally blankets the top of the world during the summer will be gone by 2050, says James Overland, an oceanographer at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory. Earlier studies had predicted it would be nearly a century before that much ice vanished. "This is a major change," Overland said. "This is actually moving the threshold up."
All of this is indeed horrifying, but it is not cause for despair, but rather a call to action. The good news is that there is still time to save the Arctic, though the window is closing. Our hope lies in a rapid response including both deep and immediate carbon dioxide reductions, as well as a full-court press on other greenhouse pollutants such as methane. While carbon dioxide emissions remain in the atmosphere for about a century, and therefore commit us to long term warming, methane is more powerful but remains for only about a decade. Opportunities to reduce methane from sources like landfills, mining, and agriculture abound, and such reductions would also directly benefit air quality and human health. With such reductions we can still buy ourselves some time.But we cannot "stay the course" of our current energy consumption, land use, and transportation patterns, without losing the Arctic sea ice, polar bears, and the quality of life we have enjoyed.
(All of these found on Ned Sublette's mailing list, sorry but I don't have a proper subscription request url)

Image: a 15-year-old Inca girl who died in an Andean human sacrifice ritual around 1500 AD, in Argentina. Indigenous groups unsuccessfully tried to stop the exhibition of her corpse and others, arguing they should instead be reburied or kept away from public display:
Scientists believe the so-called Children of Llullaillaco were sacrificed more than 500 years ago in a ceremony marking the annual corn harvest. Dressed in fine clothes and given corn alcohol to put them to sleep, the victims were then left to die at an elevation of 22,080 feet. (...) Seated with her legs bent and her arms resting on her stomach, the Maiden's remains are still adorned with a gray shawl and bone and metal ornaments. Scientists say her face was daubed with red pigment and around her mouth they found flecks of coca leaf, which is chewed by highland Indians to blunt the effects of altitude.Link. Here's a Wikipedia entry on the volcano in Argentina where her mummified remains, and those of two other children, were found: Link.

(Thanks, Susannah Breslin, Samantha, Rufus Griscom, Ange, Leo, Philip Proefrock, Jon, Bonnie)

A music video for the song "pornografia," from Trisfe, a band from Seville (Spain). Barbie and Ken get it on, then take a milkbath. It's kind of lovely. Here's the video, directed by Joaquin Leon, and here's their MySpace, the song appears on a forthcoming LP. (thanks, Susannah Breslin)

Radar points to a Total Film magazine interview with Quentin Tarantino, in which the director says he's toying with the idea of making some 3D porn films. He wouldn't be the first to do so, but it's certainly an interesting prospect. Link to Radar item, Total Film's October issue contents are not yet online. (thanks, Susannah Breslin!)
Seattles' Roq La Rue has stellar art hanging right now. First, a mini show of Femke Hiemstra's "Heatwave" series of exquisite drawings and digitally-colored prints. Above, "Skinny Dipping" (graphite on paper, 7" x 7"), which my lovely wife just purchased for me as a birthday gift. Link to Hiemstra exhibition
And the main exhibition features the incredible talents of Stella Hultberg, Amy Sol, and Oksana Badrak. Seen here, from left to right, Hultberg's "Sometimes" (oil and ink on tea-stained paper, 12" x 16"); Sol's "Music of Turtles" (acrylic on wood, 8" x 10"); Badrak's "Lost #3" (giclee print, 8" x 10").
Link to Hultberg, Sol, and Barak exhibition
To request a 15-minute slot, email Maker Faire director Sherry Huss at sherry@oreilly.com.“We’re looking for anyone who has something fun to share, something they’ve made with their hands,” explains Dale Dougherty, Publisher & Editor of Make magazine. “It can be practical or impractical—it could be something simple like a creative Halloween costume or maybe some handmade jewelry. Or it could be something wild like a bike with ten wheels, or a dog-powered lawn mower. Whatever it is, the more creative and imaginative, the better!”
Simultaneously, at the Museum’s Invention Convention exhibit, which closes September 30, will be in full swing offering kids the opportunity to experiment with gadgets and gizmos and become inventors using their creativity and imagination. They will have the opportunity to work on projects, such as building a jitterbug, designing rubber band powered cars, or assembling burglar alarms.
Link to Maker Faire, Link to Children's Museum of Houston
LinkIn short, some $8.8 billion of the $12 billion proved impossible to find. "Who in their right mind would send 360 tons of cash into a war zone?" asked Rep. Henry Waxman, chairman of the House Oversight Committee. "But that's exactly what our government did."
Because contractors were paid on cost-plus arrangements, they had a powerful incentive to spend to the hilt. The undisputed master of milking the system is KBR, the former Halliburton subsidiary so ubiquitous in Iraq that soldiers even encounter its customer-survey sheets in outhouses. The company has been exposed by whistle-blowers in numerous Senate hearings for everything from double-charging taxpayers for $617,000 worth of sodas to overcharging the government 600 percent for fuel shipments. When things went wrong, KBR simply scrapped expensive gear: The company dumped 50,000 pounds of nails in the desert because they were too short, and left the Army no choice but to set fire to a supply truck that had a flat tire. "They did not have the proper wrench to change the tire," an Iraq vet named Richard Murphy told investigators, "so the decision was made to torch the truck."
In perhaps the ultimate example of military capitalism, KBR reportedly ran convoys of empty trucks back and forth across the insurgent-laden desert, pointlessly risking the lives of soldiers and drivers so the company could charge the taxpayer for its phantom deliveries. Truckers for KBR, knowing full well that the trips were bullshit, derisively referred to their cargo as "sailboat fuel."
Drumpants are the invention of a hacker called Odbol, "a set of pants that enable the wearer to produce drum sounds by hitting various parts of the pants with his hands. The wearer thusly becomes a cyborg musician, his body assuming the roles of both player and instrument, allowing for spontaneous electric hambone solos or even collaborations with other musicians in a band setting." Check out the videos for percussive thigh-slapping goodness.
Link
(via Engadget)
The entertainment companies haven't been able to get DRM mandates in the developed world. The US struck down the Broadcast Flag, Europe's proposal for its own version of the Broadcast Flag infection is stalled and may just die. Hollywood can't convince governments in the developed world to rewrite their broadcast policy to line their pockets, but they've managed to capture the government of a developing nation.
The Brazilian constitution demands that TV be "free and gratuitous" -- something that can't possibly be squared with a foreign-controlled DRM system that prevents saving, copying, and educational use of TV programs. Local activists are organizing -- if you're in Brazil, you need to get involved now.
Link (Thanks, Pedro)In spite of all these arguments, the battle is being won by the broadcasters. There are only a few Ministries in Brazil who went public against the implementation of the DRM: the Ministry of Culture and the Ministry of Science & Technology, among others. Nevertheless, the almighty Ministry of Communications, led by Helio Costa - a former anchorman of the largest Brazilian broadcasting company (TV Globo) - totally supports the adoption of DRM...
Proprietary and expensive, HDCP system would make set-top boxes even more expensive than the "one hundred dollars" promised by Minister Helio Costa. Some recent estimates indicate that the set-top boxes might cost up to US$ 400 - and we are talking about a country in which 1/3 of the population have per capita incomes of less than US$90. Considering that more than 90% of the households have television sets, think about a television divide between those with and without access to digital television.

Designer Sasha Tseng (unlinkable Flash site here) has created this prototype toaster/notepad. Scribe your note on the tablet over the toaster, and it will burn the message into the bread. Link (via Cribcandy)
See also:
Transparent toaster "celebrates toasting"
ZUSE toaster "prints" low-res images
PlayStation2 toaster
Toaster burns skull-and-xbones into bread
Complicated, interesting "six-part" toaster

The Persian Puzzle Rug is made out of assemble-it-yourself water-cut rubber patterned after a traditional Persian rug. Each square meter of rug requires 1225 pieces -- and you can choose from monochrome or colored pieces. Link (via Cribcandy)
(Photo credit: Cropped thumbnail taken from a larger pic by Katrin Sonnleitner, found on Kidsmodern)
"There are programmers who are working for brokers, and the brokers are selling the malware to other criminals, who are then reselling the malware to other criminals," says Trend Micro's Parry. "When they capture a bunch of systems, they resell those systems to another criminal, and another criminal. The actual hacker types don't want to get their hands dirty with something that would actually send them to prison." Other groups build affiliate networks that tap into legitimate and semi-legitimate businesses. In a presentation at the Defcon hacking conference this year, Peter Gutmann of the University of Auckland's Department of Computer Science described networks in which businesses would pay affiliates up to 30 cents for each machine they infect with spyware or adware...Link (via Beyond the Beyond)Other operations mirror legitimate software as a service providers. These "malware-as-a-service" providers rent out access to botnets or Web-based attack tools. Gutmann noted one example in which a Russian group rented out its malicious Website. A prospective buyer could get the 100 visitors for free, but then had to pay US$4 per 1,000 visitors up to 5,000, US$3.80 per 1000 up to 10000, and US$3.50 per 1,000 if they bought 10,000 or more. "Software rental is just another way to get money out of this market," says Oliver Friedrichs, Symantec's Director of Security Response. "It's common to see authors who write keyloggers and botnetworks, and then rent them out to people ultimately who may launch a phishing campaign or a spam campaign."
Defense contractor Northrop Grumman has published a comic book promoting drones and "nintendo warfare" for kids. Special Ops 5: UAS STRIKES! tells the story of a group of pinned-down US soldiers who extricate themselves by invoking satellites, robots, and drones that chase of balaclava-clad swarthy terrorists.
Link
(via Danger Room)
Getting a lot of responses asking, "What do you mean?" Context is your problem. When you're asking a question, anticipate any missing details that could cause an extended back-and-forth. Each time someone sends you a reply, you've gone to the back of that person's line. Do what you can to make your emails count the first time.LinkAnd for god's sake, have a subject line. One that makes sense. Some of the most important emails I've received didn't have a subject, and they almost fell through as a result. Don't waste that space with words like "Important" or "Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:". If the topic changes, change the subject line to match it. Remember that on recipients' screens, your subject competes with a large number of others for their attention.
Old-school email users have a tendency to trim everything out of the body of an email except their replies. Don't do this. For example, if you send me an invitation to speak at a conference and I ask what the topic is, you might reply with just the topic, snipping out all the details of the conference. If I've forgotten about your email by the time you reply, this means that I've got to go back through an enormous email archive to find your original message in order to figure out what you're talking about. Even if I remember, it means that I no longer have the details to hand. Don't trim email. Let it run long. It's the 21st century: an email with an extra 10k of old text at the bottom of it isn't going to swamp my mailer (the 20,000 daily spams are doing that very nicely, thank you).
Jim says: "Jamais Cascio pointed out this CNN video of Bush giving a talk on subprime mortgages. Check out the alien behind the window in the background." [Above Bush's right shoulder]. Link
Over at gadgets.boingboing.net this afternoon: proof that the new iPod Nano is neither chocolate nor butter. I wrote a little table-side review of the new stuff Apple released this week. Link, Discuss.
Here's an example of Roy Doty's work in MAKE. (Click on thumbnail for enlargement) (The puzzle was selected by Michael H. Pryor.)
LinkPoint of Gnome Return
One hundred very smart garden gnomes are snatched from their homes by an evil wizard. He tells them he is going to line them all up in a row, and place red and blue hats on each of their heads. They won't be able to see the color of their own hats or anyone's behind them, but they will be able to see the hats of the gnomes in front of them. The wizard will start at the back of the line and ask each gnome to tell the color of his own hat. Each gnome can only answer either "red" or "blue." If he gives the wrong answer, he will be led off to work on the wizard's landscaping for the rest of eternity. If he answers correctly, he will be returned to his own garden. Then the wizard will move on to the next gnome in line.
All of the gnomes will be able to hear the answers of the gnomes behind them, but they will not know if they were led off to forced labor or if they answered correctly and were set free. The gnomes are allowed to consult and agree on a strategy beforehand (while the wizard listens in) but after being lined up, they will not be able to communicate in any other way besides their answer of "red" or "blue" (in other words, they won't be able to change the pitch of their voice or give any other clues to the other gnomes once they are in line and the hats are placed on their heads). What strategy should the gnomes use to maximize the total number of gnomes that will be set free? Hint: They can do pretty well, even if the wizard hears their plan and puts the hats on in such a way to thwart whatever idea they come up with.
Above: Roy Doty's lllustration from Look magazine, April 15th, 1958.
It's illustrator Roy Doty's birthday! I first discovered Roy's wonderful work as a child, when I got my hands on a stack of 1950s issues of Popular Science and became obsessed with his "Wordless Workshop" comic strip.
A few years ago, I learned that Roy was still illustrating for books and magazines, with no sign of slowing down after a six-decade career. I contacted him about illustrating for MAKE magazine. He like the ideas, and now illustrates MAKE's puzzle page.
From The Complete Guide to Cartooning By Gene Byrnes, Grosset & Dunlap (1950):
"A crowd to Roy Doty isn't just a lot of people repeating themselves. It is a big and wonderful collection of individuals, each doing something different. The throng behind the radio announcer is worth studying for the variety of action portrayed, and for its pattern of beautiful linework."
Happy birthday, Roy!
LinkRead Peter Bagge's cover story/cartoon on gun control; features on Robert Heinlein, the regulation of lifesaving drugs, and post-Kelo legislation; as well as Nick Gillespie's Editor's Note, letters to the editor, citings, and much, much more!
Link (thanks, Marc Powell)Madeleine L’Engle, who in writing more than 60 books, including childhood fables, religious meditations and science fiction, weaved emotional tapestries transcending genre and generation, died Thursday in Connecticut. She was 88.
Her death, of natural causes, was announced today by her publisher, Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
Ms. L’Engle (pronounced LENG-el) was best known for her children’s classic, “A Wrinkle in Time,” which won the John Newbery Award as the best children’s book of 1963. By 2004, it had sold more than 6 million copies, was in its 67th printing and was still selling 15,000 copies a year.
- helsinki looks- pre-pixelated tees
- gamer shirts
- oddica
- spreadshirt
- tie a tie
- chicken suit
- uniforms
- eco friendly bags
- wearable
- and the bride wore
Web Zen Home and Archives, Store (Thanks Frank!)
Image: "TV helmet," part of a series of sculptures made in the '60s by Walter Pichler, on we-make-money-not-art.
Link to the full text of Loretta's call to keyboards, and submissions should are due by Sept 28th. The Wired folks have created a new submissions tool, so go ahead and use that to plug in your ideas: LinkIn early August, NASA internally released its latest marketing campaign, designed to show its relevance and value to the American people. Its new slogan? "NASA explores for answers that power our future." The campaign now seems to be aborted, but it did get me thinking, could we do any better? I am no marketing genius, but I think that we could. I mean North Face's has much more zing, "Never Stop Exploring." Even Dow Chemicals did better, "The Human Element."
Now, I know that NASA does not have the massive budget that these companies do to hire super star advertising execs. I also know that a lot of people at NASA put a lot of time and thought into this new campaign and so I don't want to criticize it without offering up some constructive alternatives. Therefore, I am turning to cyberspace and the power of crowdsourcing to come up with some alternatives to offer them. One of the issues they cite in their market research is a challenge being relevant to people 18-24. Maybe we could help. I will even throw in prizes.
The writer of the best slogan will get a DVD of the space movie of their choice, From the Earth to the Moon, Star Wars, Battlestar Galactica, etc and will be interviewed for a follow up posting on what it takes to engage the public with space. Other noteworthy submission will get other small space swag.
Someone on Second Life is offering "tiny, adorable baby unicorns that you can hold and cuddle... but they come with a price. You can only get them by having sex with an adult unicorn located at the bel Highland sim..."
NSFW images. Link (Thanks, Kris!)
First, they came for our toothpaste. Now, our tank tops?
Kyla Ebbert, 23, was recently escorted off a Southwest Airlines flight by a male customer service supervisor for wearing the outfit shown in this photograph. The college student and Hooters waitress was later permitted to return to the plane and take her flight, but only after she put up a fuss and adjusted her outfit:
“I asked him what part of my outfit was offensive,” she said. “The shirt? The skirt? And he said, 'The whole thing.' ”In this San Diego Union Tribune column, a fashion critic and a writer were asked for their opinion on Ms. Ebbert's outfit, and the way she was treated by Southwest:"Keith" asked her to go home, change and take a later flight. She refused, citing her appointment. The plane was ready to leave, so Keith relented. He had her pull up her tank top a bit, pull down her skirt a bit, and return to her seat.
Pascual detected sexism in the way Ebbert was treated, wondering if a man would have been asked to change clothes. Do men dress inappropriately? “I see butt cracks, a lot of butt cracks,” she said.Link. (thanks, Bruce Schneier!)In its letter, Southwest said “there were concerns about the revealing nature of her outfit.” I called Hollye Chacón, the Southwest customer relations representative who wrote the letter, to see if we were talking about the same outfit.
“What exactly was being revealed?” I asked. She said yesterday she'd call back, but never did. That's pretty revealing in itself.
Update: Manolo the shoeblogger points us to Southwest's own response to this at their blog: Link. They link approvingly to the website of an MSNBC producer who had this to say:
At first, when she appeared on the set, it didn't seem like her outfit was so inappropriate. It was clear that her skirt was pretty short, but it didn't seem worthy of getting a lecture from a customer service representative on how to dress. But when she sat down, we learned just how short that skirt was -- when she flashed our national television audience. Yeah, that skirt was short.Manolo says,
Many blogs have found the images from the 1970s of the Southwest flight attendants dressed like the Hooters girls. Here is the NPR link, and the very amusing post from Feministing. And the Manolo' s commentary on this entire brouhaha: one, two. Also, if you wish to be disgusted, check out what many young and silly Arizona women are wearing: one, two. Compared to this, Kyla Ebbert is Donna Reed.
Here's a statement from a group of Burning Man participants known as The Comfort & Joy Family, sent to Boing Boing by Kitten Calfee. Statement continues after the jump.
On the morning of Thursday, August 30th a young man from Colorado chose to end his life in the rafters of a public tent at the Comfort & Joy Burning Man theme camp.Though he was unknown to us, in the wake of his passing we're learning from those who knew him that he was creative, kind, unconventional and smart, and that he was regarded with affection by many.
His final act, committed in solitude, has one lasting effect as it brings us together to mark his passing. To all who have offered our camp their sympathy and support during this time, thank you. To all who knew him, please accept our sincere condolences.
It is estimated that there was an one hour interval between the last visit to the tent by a camp member, and the discovery of the body by a second camp member. It is believed that the tent was unoccupied during this time, and that there were no witnesses to the suicide.
LinkThis video shows a balancing robot moving with such fluidity and apparent emotion, that it almost seems alive.
Magnus Linderoth and Kristian Soltesz, students of Lunds University in Sweden, posted a video last winter of their "inverted pendulum" robot. I only found it recently because I saw a post in MAKE about double pendulums and searched for more in YouTube. The robot in the video tries desperately to keep a rod balanced in the air like a broomstick. As the researcher meddles with the robot, it responds with various tactics.

Serial entrepreneur Michael Robertson, who founded the famously RIAA-sued MP3.com, shares some thoughts on a lawsuit filed this week by DivX against Universal Music Group. UMG is also in a tussle with the online video service Veoh, over similar issues.
Michael says:
Divx filed a pre-emptive lawsuit against UMG asking courts to affirm the legality of their Stage6 video hosting site. This is the second San Diego based company to engage media companies in court. The first was Veoh who also sued UMG. What does this mean? I would speculate the following:Link to DivX's press release today, with the headline "DivX Requests Federal Court Affirmation of DMCA Protection for Stage6." (via pho list, reposted with permission)- UMG must be sending out threatening demand letters to many companies.
- Tech companies are getting more savvy wih legal options and realizing the value of playing offense, not just defense.
- San Diego is building some institutional expertise. DivX was started by Jordan Greenhall, who worked at MP3.com in the early days. Other former MP3.com people are at DivX. One coincidence is that divx has occupied the last 2 office buildings that MP3.com used. They watched MP3's unsuccessful legal battles and maybe learned some things. Veoh was founded by Dmitry Shapiro, a friend of mine who is very smart.
Be interesting to watch this play out. I predict it won't be the "lamb to slaughter" that MP3.com was, for many reasons.
[T]he University of St Andrews team has created an 'incredible levitation effects’ by engineering the force of nature which normally causes objects to stick together.LinkProfessor Ulf Leonhardt and Dr Thomas Philbin, from the University of St Andrews in Scotland, have worked out a way of reversing this pheneomenon, known as the Casimir force, so that it repels instead of attracts.
Their discovery could ultimately lead to frictionless micro-machines with moving parts that levitate But they say that, in principle at least, the same effect could be used to levitate bigger objects too, even a person.
LinkMassachusets State Treasurer Timothy P. Cahill and his family were detained at Logan Airport for over an hour when Customs officials discovered that one of his daughters was carrying contraband in the form of 3 peaches. Predictably, the agents were rude and unreasonable, and Cahill was told that he had to immediately pay a $300 fine or spend the night in jail. Could he appeal the fine? The officials wouldn't say.
To his enormous credit, Cahill didn't try to wiggle out of the situation by telling the officials that he was the Treasurer. He endured the process as any other citizen would. And now he's pissed.
I work for Grooveshark, a music service based out of Gainesville, Florida. The upshot is that we are offering free, unlimited streaming as well as DRM-Free tracks for download (at around .99 cents per track). Since we're doing this all over a peer to peer network a la Limewire, we have also decided to share a percentage of each sale with the people actually sharing the music. Thus, if you upload a song and someone downloads it from you part of the money goes to the copyright holder, part does to us and the rest is credited to your account.Link (Thanks, Steve!)We are really working to build grass roots support for this idea. we have gotten the interest of a ton of independent labels as well as some larger ones (Magnatunes/Naxos/Sheridan Square), and even though we're not out of California we have still managed to raise awareness with Angel Investors. We've released our BETA and the press release for it is going out later today, we want as many people to see the product as we possible can and your help would go a long way.
Link to New Scientist article, Link to YouTube videoCallahan and Coleman say (the output from the device) can also be sent to a speech synthesiser, allowing a paralysed person to "speak" out loud. Recent refinements to the algorithms used may make it possible to interpret whole sentences thought out by the user. This could potentially restore near-normal speech to people who have not spoken for years, the researchers say.
Previously on BB:
• NASA's silent speech system Link
• Subvocalization mic functional prototype Link
Our friends at Fortean Times have posted a bunch of new reader-submitted "simulacra photos." In Fortean terms, simulacra photos depict "spontaneous or natural figures or images. These can occur in nature as well as in the chance conjunction of artefacts." This cloudy face was snapped last winter with a phonecam in Sittingbourne, Kent, England. Link
LinkThis is a science fair project that I did in middle school and completely disgusted the entire female staff of Benton Middle. The purpose of this project is to show how the electric chair works and discuss basic electricity - currents and conductivity.
This is perhaps not the most politically correct science fair project, but it definitely gets attention. And although it is more based on presentation than science, most people find it very interesting to learn how an electric chair works.

Michael Buckbee, proprietor of a "Fabjectory" (Bruce Sterling's neologism "fabject" + "factory" = Fabjectory) has created a Second Life version of the print-and-fold minicomic of Printcrime, created by talented comics artist Martin Cendreda (the story appears in my collection Overclocked. He sez, "We use rapid prototyping machines to create real life objects from the avatars and sculptures that people make in SecondLife and I've been vainly trying to explain to people that this isn't so much about creating expensive immobile dolls for people as it is breaking ground for a new way to interact with the world, something Print Crime does so well." Screenshot Link 1, Screenshot Link 2
• Leatherman Skeletool: Lightest Full-Sized Multi-Tool
• Confirmation: No Bluetooth in iPod Touch
• Blowing Out the Dust: Afternoon Edition
• Cabinet Jack: Multi-Tool for Cabinet Makers
• Sony HES-V1000 Home Entertainment Server
• Alienware Rack-Mount Hanger 18 HD Media Server
• Skull Made from Melted Rawk Cassette Tapes
• HP Back in the Smartphone Game with New iPAQs
• Holland Electro Wave: TV and Microwave in One
• Samsung Files Patent for Sentry Robot Turret
• Morning Tech Deals Highlights
• Apple launch day funny, 140 characters or less: Jesse Thorn
Link (Thanks, Carl!)-- a way to make sparklingly clear liquids that are intensely flavored with ... well, whatever you like: meats, fruits, vegetables, cheeses, breads, any and all combinations of ingredients.
Why would anyone want to make such a thing? Think of such liquids as essences. They have no fibers, no pulp, no fat, no substance at all. They’re just flavor in fluid form, perhaps with a tinge of color, like a classic beef consommé. In fact chefs are calling these essences consommés, and they often use them the same way, as a soup or a sauce. And they can be delightfully surprising, because their appearance often gives no hint of the pleasure they’re about to deliver.
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“We’re looking for anyone who has something fun to share, something they’ve made with their hands,” explains Dale Dougherty, Publisher & Editor of Make magazine. “It can be practical or impractical—it could be something simple like a creative Halloween costume or maybe some handmade jewelry. Or it could be something wild like a bike with ten wheels, or a dog-powered lawn mower. Whatever it is, the more creative and imaginative, the better!”
In short, some $8.8 billion of the $12 billion proved impossible to find. "Who in their right mind would send 360 tons of cash into a war zone?" asked Rep. Henry Waxman, chairman of the House Oversight Committee. "But that's exactly what our government did."
In spite of all these arguments, the battle is being won by the broadcasters. There are only a few Ministries in Brazil who went public against the implementation of the DRM: the Ministry of Culture and the Ministry of Science & Technology, among others. Nevertheless, the almighty Ministry of Communications, led by Helio Costa - a former anchorman of the largest Brazilian broadcasting company (TV Globo) - totally supports the adoption of DRM...

Read Peter Bagge's cover story/cartoon on gun control; features on Robert Heinlein, the regulation of lifesaving drugs, and post-Kelo legislation; as well as Nick Gillespie's Editor's Note, letters to the editor, citings, and much, much more!


This video shows a balancing robot moving with such fluidity and apparent emotion, that it almost seems alive.
Massachusets State Treasurer Timothy P. Cahill and his family were detained at Logan Airport for over an hour when Customs officials discovered that one of his daughters was carrying contraband in the form of 3 peaches. Predictably, the agents were rude and unreasonable, and Cahill was told that he had to immediately pay a $300 fine or spend the night in jail. Could he appeal the fine? The officials wouldn't say.
Callahan and Coleman say (the output from the device) can also be sent to a speech synthesiser, allowing a paralysed person to "speak" out loud. Recent refinements to the algorithms used may make it possible to interpret whole sentences thought out by the user. This could potentially restore near-normal speech to people who have not spoken for years, the researchers say.
This is a science fair project that I did in middle school and completely disgusted the entire female staff of Benton Middle. The purpose of this project is to show how the electric chair works and discuss basic electricity - currents and conductivity.
-- a way to make sparklingly clear liquids that are intensely flavored with ... well, whatever you like: meats, fruits, vegetables, cheeses, breads, any and all combinations of ingredients.
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