« a day earlier February 14, 2008
February 15, 2008
a day later » February 17, 2008

Balloon Man visits a nursing home.


A balloon artist visits a nursing home, shapes crazy hats and bracelets and geegaws out of balloons, and makes a lot of elderly people very happy for a while. That's it. No catch, no irony. Video link. (thanks, nirvan)

Update: From the comments thread, nirvan adds:

The balloon artist is Addi Somekh. All of Addi's YouTube videos are pretty amazing. The music is by The Evangenitals.
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A 14-day-old Samoan infant died in DHS detention at Honolulu airport earlier this week, and American Samoa's delegate to Congress is calling for an investigation:
The baby had been flown to Honolulu for emergency heart surgery. He died while detained inside a customs' room at the Honolulu airport with his mother and a nurse.
Link (thanks Nithya)
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Objectivism in Bioshock


Kotaku has a doozy of a post up today -- Yaron Brooks, the president of the Ayn Rand Institute, talking about the use of objectivism in the first-person-shooter game Bioshock:

BioShock may have been conceived as a study in nuance, a place for gamers to discover and explore at their own pace, but its dip into the ethical morass of Ayn Rand's objectivist philosophies has brought her beliefs back into the mainstream spotlight and even piqued the interest of the Ayn Rand Institute's president, Yaron Brook.

Brook, a former member of the Israeli Army military intelligence and award-winning finance professor at Santa Clara University, first took notice of the game when he discovered his 18-year-old son playing it. It's a fact that didn't bother Brook despite his son's objectivist beliefs and the game's not so positive take on the philosophy.

"My son has to find his own way in life," he said. "There are certain games I wouldn't want him to play, like Grand Theft Auto, games that celebrate criminality. But a game that might lead him to think and have him challenge his ideas, I'm fine with. "Luckily for me he doesn't agree with the game, he still seems to believe in objectivism."

Link (thanks, Brian Crecente!)
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Submersible car

The Rinspeed sQuba is an amphibious electric vehicle inspired by the submersible Lotus Esprit that Q gave to James Bond in The Spy Who Loved Me. There's only one sQuba in existence and it cost more than $1.5 million to engineer and build.
 Pages Cars Squba Gallery 250 Squba A3 250 "For safety reasons, we have built the vehicle as an open car so that the occupants can get out quickly in an emergency," said (Rinspeed CEO Frank) Rinderknecht, 52. Passengers will be able to keep breathing underwater through an integrated tank of compressed air similar to what is used in scuba diving. The sQuba's top speed on land is about 77 mph, but it slows down to 3 mph on the surface of the water, and 1.8 mph underwater....

"We always want to do cars that are outrageous, which nobody has done before. So we thought, 'Let's make a car dive,"' said Rinderknecht, whose innovative company has made transparent, flying and voice-activated cars in previous attention-grabbing displays at the Geneva Auto Show.
Link to CNN, Link to Rinspeed (Thanks, Lindsay Tiemeyer!)
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Warren Ellis: Freak Angels


Freak Angels: the latest from Warren Ellis, with Paul Duffield, version 0001 is now online and it's lovely.

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The Cambridge University Library's tower has long been rumored to be packed with vintage pornography books from the Victorian era. Now, a million dollar grant is funding the online cataloging of the 170,000 publications in the 17 floor tower. Turns out, the closest thing to erotica up there are titles like "A Golden Guide To Matrimony" and "Flirting Made Easy." They're mixed in with the likes of "How to mesmerize" and "Wasps have stings; or, beware of tight-lacing." (Shhhh... I heard they moved the real hardcore stuff to the library's sub-basement.) From The Telegraph:
Students of pornography can take heart, however, because more recent erotica is kept there thanks to its copyright library status.

(Vanessa Lacey, the manager of the Cambridge University Library Tower Project,) said: "There's plenty of pornography in the library which is more recent.

"People can come and have a look at it - for their research. But there's nothing terribly racy from the 19th century. What we found is the Mills and Boon of the era."
Link to The Telegraph, Link to the Cambridge University Library Tower Project (via Cabinet of Wonders)
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Julian Cope's Japrocksampler blog

COOP says:
Packshot I've been enjoying Julian Cope's highly-recommended new book on Japanese 60's/70's freak/psych/noise rock very much, and I'm just beginning the process of tracking down some of the music therein (and so far, it is just as crazy and interesting as described!) For someone with a 20-year+ music addiction, it is a great thrill to be turned on to a whole chunk of great stuff that you previously knew nothing about.

Anyway, I just noticed that Mr. Cope has a companion website, with a full A-Z encyclopedia of artists and albums. If the sight of all those crazy LPs doesn't whet your appetite, you deserve to listen to the new Britney Spears CD instead!
Link to Japrocksampler blog, Link to buy Japrocksampler book
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Truth about teleportation

Scientific American's JR Minkel interviewed CalTech physicist H. Jeff Kimble about quantum teleportation. In the article, Kimble explains in simple terms why recent experiments in quantum teleportation have nothing to do with the Star Trek transporter. As Minkel sums it up, the phenomenon "turns out to be more relevant to computing than to commuiting." From the interview:
Scientific American: What's the biggest misconception about teleportation?
Jeff Kimble: That the object itself is being sent. We're not sending around material stuff. If I wanted to send you a Boeing 757, I could send you all the parts, or I could send you a blueprint showing all the parts, and it's much easier to send a blueprint. Teleportation is a protocol about how to send a quantum state—a wave function—from one place to another.
Link
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Picture 4-71 In Casanova Book 1: Luxuria, the people of Earth are under the control of E.M.P.I.R.E.'s (Extra-Military Police Intelligence, Rescue, and Espionage) Cornelius Quinn, a tough-as-molybdenum son-of-a-bitch with a huge body, a little head and not much more empathy for his charges than the enemy he's sworn to defeat, W.A.S.TE. (an acronym that changes meaning at the whim of its insane bandage-faced leader, Newman Xeno).

Quinn has a loyal daughter, Zephyr, and a ne'er-do-well son, Casanova, a partying lothario who resembles a cross between Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. Zephyr is a respected agent of E.M.P.I.R.E., while twin brother Cass has worked as hard at making his father disappointed in him as he has at being a creep-for-hire.

Shortly after Zephyr dies on a mission, Xeno kidnaps Cass and inserts him into an alternate space-time where his sister is the black sheep and Cass is was good son (who got killed on a mission, just as his sister did back on the other Earth). Xeno orders Cass to destroy E.M.P.I.R.E. while making it look like he's still on their side. It's not as easy as Cass thinks at first, what with the torture his sister enjoys inflicting on him and the hard time his father gives him for suddenly becoming into something of a screw-up. (After all, the Cornelius Quinn in this dimension doesn't know that his good son has been replaced by this work-shirking hustler from an alternate universe, who's trying his best to keep up the ruse.)

Plenty of freakish and fun villains (my favorite is the Kirby-esque Fabula Berserko -- "a big mutant brain... three monks that practiced some form of occult Zen for so long they fused together in a wad) and weird scenes, like an island where sexual orgone energy fuels non-stop orgies with sentient sex robots and humans, give this darkly-humored science fiction a quirky kick. It also introduced me to the respectable talents of Matt Fraction (Author) and Gabriel Ba (Author).

(This edition collects Casanova #1-7.) Link

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New Jim Flora Print

 Images Flog Mike 200802 Manhattan-72-Flog

Our friend Irwin Chusid has released a new Jim Flora print, and it's lovely.

Jim Flora Art LLC has produced a limited-edition, archival-quality fine art print of a 1954 Jim Flora hand-tinted woodcut entitled Manhattan.

The cityscape depicts New York in its 1950s glory, including a number of gotham landmarks such as the Empire State Building, St. Patrick's Cathedral, Madison Square Garden, the Statue of Liberty, famous theaters and legendary musical bistros, Washington Square arch, subways, taxis, horse-drawn carriages and tourists.

Only twenty-five (25) prints of Manhattan were produced for this edition. We are offering five (5) prints (#21/25 through #25/25) now on eBay. After these five prints are sold at the asking price, prices will increase for the rest of the edition.

Link
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 Uploads Product Page Image-Jr03---Joey-Ramone---Punk  Uploads Product Page Image-Jl09---John-Lennon---Yoko-Ono
In the discussion following Xeni's post about Yoko Ono yesterday, Shawn Wolfe referenced having just bought one of Worn Free's "Yoko Ono" t-shirts, just like John Lennon used to wear. I checked out Worn Free and they have a very cool business idea. They recreate obscure vintage t-shirts famously worn by rockers, like Lennon's "Working Class Hero" tee, Iggy Pop's "I Wiped Out The 60's" tee, Debbie Harry's "Punk" tee, Frank Zappa's "Rental" tee, Joey Ramone's "Capitol Theatre" tee, and a slew of others. My favorite is the "Yoko Ono" and Joey Ramone's "Punk Magazine" tee. Link
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Web 2.0 meets Marxist (Foucaultian?) economic theory in the latest video hijinks from Austrian subversive art collective monochrom. Meet an online porn monster ("iPhone? noooom nom nom nom") and learn how Google-y eyed neo-liberalism screws over the proletariat in "Kiki, Bubu, and the Shift."

Link to Boing Boing tv post with comments thread and downloadable video.

More monochrom episodes on Boing Boing tv:

* Monochrom: MyFaceSpace, the musical
* Monochrom: Campfire at Will
* Monochrom: Falco Stairs
* Monochrom: Bar code artist Scott Blake / Falco stencil memorial
* Human USB Hack / Very Simple Motor
* Mark's Curie Engine / Monochrom's love song for Lessig

Update: monochrom has the longer-form, uncut director's version up on their site.

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Color the brain's fear system

Brain-Fear

(Click on image to embiggen) I went to the California Science Center with my four-year-old daughter and they had a great exhibit called Goosebumps: The Science of Fear. One station shocked kids at random intervals, another station made it seem like you were sticking your hand into a terrarium filled with poison snakes and spider, another one had a device that you strapped yourself into to simulate falling.

I liked this handout for kids to color the brain's fear system. Link

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Picture 3-91

These fake eyeball stickers look like they'd come in handy, but The Museum of Hoaxes is having a hard time tracking down a place that actually sells them. They look easy enough to make yourself, though. Link

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Here's a 3-fingered robot designed to play the supremely monotonous Towers of Hanoi game at breakneck speed. Build details here: Link

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February 15, 2008
a day later » February 17, 2008

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Comments
  • "#12, 18, 24, 27 and 30 are right, uneducated voters are a lower class of human and need to be purged. Also Xeni Jardin is a talking vagina...."
  • "*facepalm* Are they serious? How does that even work? What kind of ridiculous twists do they have to do in their mind to properly balance these actions? It makes no sense, and boggles my mind. Stupid. Just stupid. Noah..."
  • "Actually, to pretend that Facebook and South Park had NOTHING to do with it is the absurd conclusion. Kids don't just start spontaneously beating on random redheads without provocation. Yes, kids can be cruel. Yes, bullies are violent, controlling assholes. And yes, every school has its share of victims and psychopaths. But these things don't happen on special days with multiple incidents. This actually seems like pretty clear proof that our media and our culture send us behavior signals all the tim..."
  • "Increasing number of government policies is not scary. One has to expect that as the world changes. What is scary is when foreign entertainment industry giants successfully drive and create that policy and thus force substantial amounts of tax revenues to be spent in monitoring and enforcing the compliance on their behalf. I think the government should insist that the businesses lobbying legislation be forced to pay the ongoing cost of enforcing them. ..."
  • ""The system potentially allows for a diminished sense of social responsibility, and could lead the user to demonstrate behaviors normally reserved for the gaming environment." Goddamn team killers......"
  • "A Fantastic Way to Create 'Mobile Ads' ! Well done!..."
  • "You said: "It isn't a mask. It is a dismembered head of Goliath." As a Famous Australian has said before: Please Explain. I've read some of the comments above - truly fascinating!..."
  • "My (completely subjective, but based on having been involved in both communities) experience has been that there is a HUGE cross-over between D&D roleplayers and kinky/BDSM types, which would tend to confirm that once they're old enough to get into the play parties, D&D players are having plenty of (creative) sex. The cross-over has always amused me- the similarities between the subcultures (detailed rules of behaviour, dramatic/slightly silly costumes, fancy titles, acting out elaborate scenarios, calling ..."
  • "Does this legal advice stretch as far as intellectual property? I've been writing my blog for years, publishing an invention every day http://iotd.patrickandrews.com. This is partly a protest against the patents system which makes it way too costly for any independent inventor to get a patent. Instead of spurring creativity, it stamps it out. I'm currently working with a UK patent attorney to provide more cost-effective IP services via our new social entreprise: InventorCentre...."
  • "Two days after this was posted. The site is technically up, and I'd love to go through all 100 rooms. But not when it takes 2 minutes to view each photograph. Not this decade. Michael Wolf: Please improve your technical infrastructure, so your work, which looks interesting, can be seen!..."

 

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