week of 03/02/2008
Fred sez, "As tax season approaches, Californians might want to know that, if you're single and your taxes are relatively simple, California may have filled out your return for you. Do you really want to pay TurboTax, again, for collating the information the government already has?" Link (Thanks, Fred!)
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La Pequeña Amy Winehouse


Trataron de forzarme ir a rehab, pero yo les dije que no, no, no. Me encantan las drogas. Link, and Previously. (OMG thx Susannah)

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The BBC appears to have inadvertently (?) removed the controversial DRM from its iPlayer video-on-demand service. Now, all BBC programmes are broadcast across the country in digital form without DRM, literally diffused at the speed of light in all directions without any restrictions, but the Beeb somehow believes that there's a new risk of piracy created by letting those same digital files out on the net.

Glyn sez, "The BBC have just launched a version of their iPlayer that works with the iPhone (and iPod Touch). Instead of streaming Flash, it streams an MP4... but they don't let non-iPhone users know it's an option. To gain access to it you need to set your browser up to claim to be a iPhone. The User Agent Switcher plugin on Firefox will let you do just that. Now you can download files on Linux from the iPlayer website." Link (Thanks, Glyn!)

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Mister Jalopy buys mixed tapes at garage sales, and we are playing them at Dinosaurs and Robots. This week on Mixed Tape Friday Night, Maria takes over the Trenton College Radio studio for "Everybody is a DJ Week." All extraneous audio, static, tape stretch, door slams and sorority sister antics have been included for your listening pleasure.
200803080845Every Friday night, Dinosaurs and Robots will upload a dusty cassette mixed tape! Found at garage sales and junkyard glove boxes, mixed tapes provide all the voyeuristic thrills of reading somebody’s diary without the related ethical quandaries.

Tune in each week for a new exploration into heavy metal thunder road trips, teenage bedroom melancholy meltdowns, college radio clunkers, headbanger barf bag parties, glam rock glitter fests, industrial punch-your-lights-out rockers and the ill-advised tapes created by lovers soon to be spurned. Before collaborative filtering, music was hand selected for us by those who know us best.

Link
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Kathryn writes, "I spent a while last night and this morning decorating Easter eggs in Mathematica and this activity has proved wildly popular in this household: My children are going to run me out of toner in my color printer very shortly. My daughter has made a document entitled 'My Little Egg Book' out of egg printouts." Link, Link to equations for egg shapes
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Miss Monster has sculpted these scratch-built steampunk animal skulls that blow me away. Fetish masks for a firelight ceremony in a parallel universe. Link to bear skull, Link to wolf skull (Thanks, Ananth!)
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The Air Force's law-firm has sent an illegal DMCA take-down notice to YouTube, demanding the removal of a publicly available video promoting its Cyber Command project. Material produced by federal agencies is not copyrighted -- cannot be copyrighted, by statute -- so there's no basis for the Air Force's representatives to swear (on penalty of perjury, no less!) that this video infringed its copyright.
It's cyber war! Lawyers representing the Air Force's elite electronic warriors have sent YouTube a DMCA takedown notice demanding the removal of the 30-second spot the Air Force created to promote its nascent Cyber Command. We'd uploaded the video to share with THREAT LEVEL readers.
Link (via Wendy Seltzer)
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Picture 2-42 Scott says: "There are a bunch of these odd Michael Jackson Playmobil custom figures up on Flickr!" Link
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Bloxes are flat-pack die-cut cardboard 3D cubes that snap together to make super-strong, lightweight, infinitely configurable dividers, shelves, tables -- and they're also sound-dampeners. They come in multiple colors and look like they can be put together by kids, too. Link
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Magician Teller of Penn and Teller's produced a hilarious -- and magical -- short video about his life as the sole survivor of a zombie uprising. Teller stays alive by fighting the walking dead with a rifle and simple conjuring tricks, and narrates his experience with a fine-tuned patter that suggests that he doesn't have to be the silent partner in the act. Link (Thanks, Justin!)
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Britain's breaking new ground in the slide into a total surveillance state: as of the end of this month, domestic passengers at the new Heathrow Terminal 5 will be fingerprinted and photographed twice, to "ensure the passenger boarding the aircraft is the same person." The airport says they'll only keep it for 24h -- unless the police need them to keep it longer.

This will all but eliminate terrorism.

Oh, wait, no.

That only works if terrorists are so picky about which domestic flight they blow up that they have to blow up one coming from terminal 5.

Well, I suppose that if you're the kind of lazy suicide bomber who believes in dying for the cause -- but not if it means rebooking your ticket or, you know, driving to Stansted or Gatwick or East Midlands or Manchester, this'll work. And that sounds like a pretty good adversary analysis. We all know how easily dissuaded suicide bombers are.

Time to buy stock in the train companies.

Even if domestic passengers have a passport with them, they will still have to go through the biometric checks.

Dr Gus Hosein, of the London School of Economics, an expert on the impact on technology on civil liberties, is one of the scheme’s strongest critics.

He said: "There is no other country in the world that requires passengers travelling on internal flights to be fingerprinted. BAA says the fingerprint data will be destroyed, but the records of who has travelled within the country will not be, and it will provide a rich source of data for the police and intelligence agencies.

"I grew up in a society where you only fingerprinted people if you suspected them of being criminals. By doing this they will make innocent people feel like criminals.

"There will also be a suspicion that this is the thin end of the wedge, that we are being softened up by making fingerprinting seem normal in the run-up to things like ID cards."

Link
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Sean Ragan says: "I was thinking about writing an adult Choose Your Own Adventure book so I made a visual map of my favorite CYOA book from when I was a kid. It's a directed graph with a node for each page and arrows indicating choices/page jumps." Link
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Chris says: "Here's interview with the governer of Montana on the Real ID that's being forced down states' throats by Homeland Security.

"This is the funniest interview I've heard with an elected politician on a security-related issue. He completely calls the Federal Government on their bluff, and completely dismantles the usefulness of this act. Please, start with the first minute. It gets better from there."

"We're putting up with the federal government on so many fronts, and nearly every month they come out with another hare-brained scheme ... to tell us that our life is going to be better if we just buckle under on some other kind of rule or regulation. And we usually just play along for a while. We ignore 'em for as long as we can. We try not to bring it to a head but if it comes to a head we found that it's best to tell 'em to go to Hell and run the state you wanna run your state.

Unfortunately this time around they've really got a hare-brained scheme... almost all those hijackers on 9/11 would have qualified for a Real ID."

Link
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Biggie Hendrix Experience


Notorious B.I.G. (RIP!) + Jimi Hendrix (RIP!) = This zip file of MP3s (alternate link here) from DJ Doc Rok. (thanks Matthew R. Rose).

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Link to larger size. P-shopped by a Boing Boing reader who posts as HOLTT, from this thread about an ETEch snap. Our colleague Joel Johnson, not pictured, is of course -- the Wizard. (thanks, Teresa!)

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Recently on Boing Boing Gadgets I popped open the Heineken BeerTender for a look (video review, including drunken hair clipper work, coming shortly), ran an older interview with Gary Gygax who passed away this week (and posted his "Random Harlot Encounter Table"), got the first look at the new "Lego Collector" catalog coming out later this year, asked everyone to help me plan a week of blogging in the woods, saw a man play a Legend of Zelda song on a carrot ocarina, took a peek at iRobot's robot wi-fi access points for the military, questioned the merit of a negative-ion-producing notebook computer, noticed that Apple and Nike are adding iPod stats tracking for cardio machines, got prepped to enjoy Slurm in real life, looked at a concept phone that would be recycled each year, saw this generation's "Hit Stix" (and the amplifier, too), said that the Renault Megane has beautiful doors that will never make it to production, saw an expensive but high-fidelity haptic interface that uses electromagnetic toruses, were impressed with a PC case that was all heat sink, applauded Wired.com's Gygax tribute, noticed that a company is selling tiny guns and grenades for LEGO minifigs, found a keyring that inflates when submerged, as well as a device for cramming limes into beer bottles. Oh, and sea cucumbers and their sexy peristaltic wriggle inspired the creation of space age plastics. Finally, I asked if the iPhone could make a killer gaming platform, especially for experimental and indie games. (Spoiler: Duh.)

I'm off in the morning for SXSWi, so lock up your sea cucumbers and gird yourself for the worst haircut in blogging.

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Skeletonsweat This week's CRAFT magazine video podcast shows how to make a knitting pattern for this killer skeleton cardigan. In the podcast, Becky Stern details how she takes an antique anatomical illustration and uses Photoshop to convert it into a gridded knitting pattern. Next week, she'll show how to make the back panel of the actual sweater.
Link (Thanks, PT!)
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In today's edition of Boing Boing tv, dramatic readings of real-life unsolicited emails. Part one, FOR MY DAUGHTER'S SAKE. If one were pitching this to a movie studio, you might describe the plot as Grapes of Wrath meets Spanish Prisoner meets an ATM. Part two, DE@L OF A LIFETIME, a tasty dish of word salad.

Link to BBtv post, with discussion, downloadable video, and talent + image / video remix credits. NSFW: Includes opera music.

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Lego arms-dealer


Brickarms is a company that specializes in making highly detailed miniature toy guns for Lego figures. They have quite a wide range, including custom minifigs in military dress. Link (via Geekologievia Boing Boing Gadgets)

See also: Brickarms: Real-World Weapons for LEGO Minifigs

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In the February 26, 2008 edition of The Stranger, Paul Constant writes about his experiences dealing with book shoplifters. (Wonderful illo by James Yamasaki).
200803071259 There's an underground economy of boosted books. These values are commonly understood and roundly agreed upon through word of mouth, and the values always seem to be true. Once, a scruffy, large man approached me, holding a folded-up piece of paper. "Do you have any Buck?" He paused and looked at the piece of paper. "Any books by Buckorsick?" I suspected that he meant Bukowski, but I played dumb, and asked to see the piece of paper he was holding. It was written in crisp handwriting that clearly didn't belong to him, and it read:

1. Charles Bukowski

2. Jim Thompson

3. Philip K. Dick

4. William S. Burroughs

5. Any Graphic Novel

This is pretty much the authoritative top five, the New York Times best-seller list of stolen books. Its origins still mystify me. It might have belonged to an unscrupulous used bookseller who sent the homeless out, Fagin-like, to do his bidding, or it might have been another book thief helping a semi-illiterate friend identify the valuable merchandise. I asked the man whether he preferred Bukowski's Pulp to his Women, as I did, and whether his favorite Thompson book was The Getaway or The Killer Inside Me. First the book chatter made him nervous, but then it made him angry: He bellowed, "You're just a little bitch, ain't'cha?" and stormed out.

I'm not sure where Aleister Crowley goes on this list, but one one bookseller told me that anything by Crowley had to be kept locked up behind glass or it would be stolen immediately. Link (Via Hang Fire Books)
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A paper from political scientist John Hickman, published in the journal Astropolitics, seeks to establish whether it would be possible to conduct commerce and trade over lightspeed-lagged interstellar distances. This has already been explored in science fiction (Karl Schroeder does a particularly fine job with his idea of the "Rights Society" in Permanence, a book with more fizzingly cool ideas per page than 98 percent of the sf ever published):
Economic exchange itself might be "alien" to the aliens. Members of an alien species may not experience the same intense sense of self that is exhibited in rationally self-interested economic exchange among humans. Instead, a collective identity could be dominant. Money might not exist and without it neither would complex markets or banking. If they do engage in economic exchange it might take a form akin to potlatch, the competitive gift-giving for status solely among members of the same tribe traditional among societies in Melanesia and the Pacific Northwest. Moreover an alien species might not live in separate societies and could thus have no conception of trade between different societies with different cultures.
Link (via Kottke)
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Today on the Worth 1000 photoshopping contest -- pop culture remixes of puppets, especially Muppets. Link
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Here's a machinima video for a convulsively funny leet-speak cover the classic Muppet song "Manamanah." The giant Tauren backup singers are especially fine. Link (via Making Light)

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 Images 2008-02 Craftsman-Skeleton-Ad This Craftsman advertisement drives me wild. I wish I had this skeleton made from tools hanging in my house.
Link
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From the September, 1955 issue of Mechanix Illustrated, this account ("I Was a Slave Scientist in Russia") of the life of the Nazi scientists who were taken to the Soviet Union (for comparison, the Nazis who came to the US were given perks like lecture tours and parts in Disney educational films):

I also like George N. from Er. He is the oldest of us and gives an impression of calm. He tells us how he had offered to develop an ultrasonic apparatus for fighting cancer for the Russians. His plans interest me and I tell him I am an ultrasonic expert. “Then you are certainly assigned to the project,” he says and I realize that my words at the examination at Bautzen have sealed my fate.

“How long in your opinion do we need to finish it?” I ask George N. I am no doctor but from my professional experiences I know that ultrasonic medicine is still in its infancy and there is nothing certain as to what will come from it. At least it is clear to me that the cancer project is a difficult and extensive task. George, on the contrary, calculates that we will finish it in two years. As I express doubts, he refers to his horoscope which forecasts a two-year stay in a foreign country and then freedom. From this moment onward I cannot believe that he is a scientist.

Link
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A couple of weeks ago I blogged about Mister Jalopy's new store, Coco's Variety, and the Hamster's Lunch snack he sold there. Now you can order Hamster's Lunch on Coco's website using PayPal and have it sent to your home.
200803071122Following the epic demand for Hamster's Lunch, Coco's is pleased to announce that everybody's favorite tea time treat is back in stock. For those not familiar, this is not a lunchtime snack for a hamster, but rather a savory rice cracker snack for people who enjoy the company of highly detailed hamster figurine. And what sort of savage wouldn't enjoy a tea time snack with a new little friend?
Link
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The late Jack Kirby created Captain America, The X-Men, The Hulk, The Fantastic Four, The Silver Surfer, Thor, Sgt. Fury, Kamandi, and many other famous characters. He was, and remains, at least twice as good as any other comic book creator I can think of. His groundbreaking innovations in layout, plot, character, and theme have not only influenced thousands of comic book creators, but the movie and animation industry as well.

Kirby: King of Comics, by Kirby's longtime friend and assistant, Mark Evanier, is part biography, part coffee table art book. The text of this lavishly-illustrated, 224-page, large format book runs 35,000 words, but Evanier says he's working on a 500,000 word biography of the world's greatest comic book writer and artist (I'll buy that when it comes out, too).

Not only was Kirby a man of awesome talent, he was also very kind-hearted. I've met a lot of my literary and artistic heroes and many of them didn't seem to be very nice. Not Kirby. I met him when I was 16 years old and I hung around him for three days. I'm sure I was a terrible pest, but he was as genial as could be, and he even gave me his address, inviting me to stay at his house if I ever came to California. What a guy. Link

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PGA Tour player Tripp Isenhour got mad a hawk that made noise while he was on a TV show, so he drove closer to the bird in his golf cart and began hitting balls at it. He eventually hit the bird and killed it. He was charged with cruelty to animals and killing a migratory bird.

"I am an animal lover," he said.

After the hawk moved within about 75 yards and perched in a tall pine tree, Isenhour allegedly said: “I’ll get him now” and aimed for the hawk.

“About the sixth ball came very near the bird’s head, and (Isenhour) was very excited that it was so close,” officer Brian Baine of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, wrote in a report.

According to witnesses, Isenhour hit the hawk a few shots later. The bird, protected as a migratory species, fell to the ground bleeding from both nostrils. “As soon as this happened, I was mortified,” Isenhour said in a statement through his management company. “There was neither any malice nor deliberate intent whatsoever to hit or harm the hawk. I was trying to simply scare it into flying away.”

Link (Via Arbroath)
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Pappy, the blogger of "Pappy's Golden Age of Comics" kindly scanned a story from a 1964 fanzine called Odd.

This early fanzine strip is from 1964. In a great little short by Marv Wolfman and artist Dave Herring perfectly captures the Wonder Woman comic. Odd was a fun fanzine, inspired by Harvey Kurtzman and Humbug.
The letters page is funny.

Picture 3-93

Link

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Case Wester Reserver University researchers are developing a new plastic inspired by sea cucumber skin that could lead to safer brain implants or even clothing that hardens into armor with the flick of a switch. Sea cucumbers have skin that can switch between soft and rigid in seconds thanks to enzymes that bind the proteins fiber, and others that cause those binds to release. The new material is triggered by water but doesn't soak up the liquid like sponges or cardboard. From New Scientist:
"We have the elastic polymer, so that's the mimic for the sea cucumber skin, and then we put in the cellulose whiskers," (Stuart) Rowan says. "You can get these from paper pulp, but we got ours from another little sea creature called a tunicate."

When dry, the cellulose fibres keep the material rigid by forming a scaffold held together by hydrogen bonds. But water molecules are better at forming such bonds, so when wet, the fibres lose their grip on one another and bond to the water molecules instead...

The rigid material could easily be inserted into brain tissue, before softening into its floppy state. That would reduce the problems with inflammation solid electrodes can cause.

Rowan says they're now working on versions of the material that switch stiffness in response to a pulse of electricity.
Link
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 Images Indelible Mar08 388  Wp-Content Authors Ben-Watts The-Bikeriders01
In the mid-1960s, photographer Danny Lyon spent several years riding with the Chicago Outlaws and documenting their scene on film. The resultant book, The Bikeriders (1968), is recognized as the first photo book about the biker subculture. It's currently available from Chronicle Books. Smithsonian magazine looks back on that moment in Lyon's career, and tells the story of the portrait above of club members Sparky and CowBoy. From Smithsonian:
Cowboy and Sparky, two pals on bikes. They've just been to a motorcycle race in Schererville, Indiana, and their girlfriends will soon get off work from the Dairy Queen. It is November 1965, and CowBoy - Irvin P. Dunsdon, who uses the capital B to this day - is 23 years old. He feels he's on top of the world.

He and Sparky — Charles Ritter - met in the Army and bonded instantly. When CowBoy got out of the service in 1964, he moved not to Utah, where he came from, but to Gary, Indiana—Sparky's hometown—so he could be there when Sparky got back from Vietnam a year later.

Now, in '65, they stick up for each other. They take no grief from anyone. They share the joy of biking on the open road. They belong to the Gary Rogues, a local motorcycle club.
Link to Smithsonian, Link to buy The Bikeriders book
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Cruzincoool I spotted in this in the SkyMall catalog, but SkyMaul couldn't have parodied it better. The Cruzin Cooler is a combination beer/food cooler and scooter. It's available in gas or electric models. According to the Cruzin Cooler site, it brings together two, er, "basic necessities of life, the ability to have cold food or a beverage handy along with the means to get somewhere, without walking." The Cruzin Cooler sells for $400 to $700 depending on the model.
Link

Previously on BB:
• Bizarre items on Sky Mall Link
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According to new research, jazz musicians unconsciously switch off regions of the brain involved in self-censorship and firing up the area linked to self-expression. The scientists from Johns Hopkins University and the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communications Disorders used fMRI to scan the brains of jazz musicians as they played a specially-designed piano keyboard. From a press release:
The scientists found that a region of the brain known as the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, a broad portion of the front of the brain that extends to the sides, showed a slowdown in activity during improvisation. This area has been linked to planned actions and self-censoring, such as carefully deciding what words you might say at a job interview. Shutting down this area could lead to lowered inhibitions, Limb suggests.

The researchers also saw increased activity in the medial prefrontal cortex, which sits in the center of the brain’s frontal lobe. This area has been linked with self-expression and activities that convey individuality, such as telling a story about yourself.

“Jazz is often described as being an extremely individualistic art form. You can figure out which jazz musician is playing because one person’s improvisation sounds only like him or her,” says (professor Charles) Limb. “What we think is happening is when you’re telling your own musical story, you’re shutting down impulses that might impede the flow of novel ideas.”
Link to press release, Link to scientific paper in Public Library of Science (PLoS) ONE (via Michael Leddy's Orange Crate Art)
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Clayton Cubitt says:

One House At A Time is a volunteer group that descended on my mom's little adopted hometown of Pearlington MS in the days after Katrina hit. They've rebuilt dozens of homes in the community, including hers, and they're still going strong. It's one of the most uplifting stories to come out of Katrina.
Here's an update, filmed by Kevin Leeser (more links on page).

About the video embedded above, Leeser writes:

The recovery from Hurricane Katrina is far from the front pages these days. There were still 30,000 families (over 110,000 American individuals) still living in FEMA trailers earlier this month (feb 2008), when the "news" of deadly levels of formaldehyde in the trailers was finally reported.

I began filming this story one month after Katrina came ashore, and I recently returned to the devastated and impoverished town of Pearlington Mississippi. Even though its several miles from the actual coast, the storm surge and the wind brought this place to the brink of its very existence. The waves that came through this town and destroyed everything in their path first had to pass through a few Chemical Plants and Oil refineries out in the Gulf of Mexico. This was not merely sea water that carried these homes away, it was a deadly stew of unknown and unreported toxins.

This story follows the recovery efforts of one group that has been based in Pearlington as soon as the roads were clear enough to get in. One House At A TIme is building homes for people of Pearlington who want to stay in the place where they call home. This video tells a little of their story, but anyone who has been there will tell you, there is no video that can be shot that can express the sort of devastation that has occurred on our own soil, to our own people. So go see it for yourself, and bring a hammer.

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Image: "Poultry in Motion" team, shot by Peter Holderness. Brad Flora says,

Last weekend, 500 Chicago hipsters, jocks, comedians, executives, bookworms and "colorful personalities" competed in a five-mile shopping cart race through the streets of Chicago. Dressed in lavish costumes, they pulled their carts, dog sled-style down sidewalks and through traffic, collecting canned goods for charity as they went and always looking for opportunities to sabotage their opponents. It's called the Chiditarod and I sent 10 reporters with hand held cameras to embed with specific teams and capture their races.
Link (main page is Flash-based)
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Web Zen: literary zen

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ETech: BoingBonic Convergence


Pesco, Cory, Mark and I were in a synchronous space-time continuum yesterday at the O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference. This doesn't happen very often! Intergalactic travel is expensive, now that spaceship nanofuel prices are up.

Dave Bullock was there, shooting portraits for Wired, and he shot this image, above. You can view the rest of his extensive photo gallery for Wired right here.

Update: many have asked why our colleague Joel Johnson wasn't in the pic -- alas, he wasn't at ETech.

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The next installment in the free "SF in SF" reading series in San Francisco is on March 16, where Jeffrey Ford and Tim Pratt will take the spotlight, emceed as always by Terry Bisson. These are great, collegial, intimate events, an opportunity to hear great writers say smart things about literature, science, and science fiction.
SUNDAY, MARCH 16

Lounge and cash bar open at 5:30PM
6:00 PM readings

Each author will read a selection from their work followed by Q&A from the audience, moderated by author Terry Bisson. Authors will schmooze and sign books afterwards in the lounge. Books will be available for sale Seating is limited, so first come, first seated.

The Variety Preview Room
The Hobart Building, 1st Floor
582 Market St. @ Montgomery, by Montgomery St. MUNI/BART
Entrance to the Hobart Bldg. is between Citibank and Quiznos

Link
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David Pogue of the NY Times visited a tech suppport center, and they gave him a CD with recordings of their favorite funny phone calls.
Caller: Hey, can you help me? My computer has locked up, and no matter how many times I type eleven, it won’t unfreeze.

Agent: What do you mean, “type eleven?”

Caller: The message on my screen says, “Error Type 11!”

On one call, the caller seemed to be taking an inordinately long time to complete each instruction she was given.

Agent: Ma’am, I can’t help noticing that every time I give you an instruction, it takes a really long time before you get back to me. Is your computer that slow?

Caller: Oh, no, it’s just the stupid, stupid design of this computer. Every time I want to click something, I have to unplug the keyboard to plug in the mouse. And then every time I want to use the keyboard again, I have to unplug the mouse. Because there’s only one jack.

Agent: Ma’am, you do realize that there’s a jack on the keyboard itself? You’re supposed to plug the mouse into the keyboard, and the keyboard into the computer.

Caller: Are YOU KIDDING ME!? Oh, wait a minute—yes, I see it now! Oh, holy cow. That’s going to be so much easier!

Agent: Just out of curiosity, how long have you been using your computer that way?

Caller: Six weeks!

Link (Thanks, Ian!)
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This giant, mysterious two-wheeled mine-clearing tank was taken from the Nazis by the Russians at the end of World War II. As Coop notes, "We have achieved total Hell Yeah. It looks like the car Darth Vader drove to high school." Link (Thanks, Coop!)
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The US Treasury Department confiscated the domain names of a British/Spanish travel agent who specializes in Hemingway tours of Cuba. Treasury claims that since Americans might have made reservations through the sites, that they were entitled to march into the domain registrar and take away a foreigner's business.
Susan Crawford, a visiting law professor at Yale and a leading authority on Internet law, said the fact that many large domain name registrars are based in the United States gives the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC, control “over a great deal of speech — none of which may be actually hosted in the U.S., about the U.S. or conflicting with any U.S. rights.”

“OFAC apparently has the power to order that this speech disappear,” Professor Crawford said.

The law under which the Treasury Department is acting has an exemption, known as the Berman Amendment, which seeks to protect “information or informational materials.” Mr. Marshall’s Web sites, though ultimately commercial, would seem to qualify, and it is not clear why they appear on the list. Unlike Americans, who face significant restrictions on travel to Cuba, Europeans are free to go there, and many do. Charles S. Sims, a lawyer with Proskauer Rose in New York, said the Treasury Department might have gone too far in Mr. Marshall’s case.

Link (Thanks, Bill!)
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LA Weekly sent a reporter (and Disney trufan) to the Doombuggies.org tenth anniversary after-hours party at the Haunted Mansion in Disneyland. The event looks like just about the coolest thing evar.

We are like kids running through that graveyard on the ride by ourselves, away from the maddening crowds in a mostly deserted park in the middle of the night. It's strange, thrilling and genuinely scary to glide through the mansion under these conditions, with animatronic spooks popping up from behind gravestones and eerie talking busts, followed by all those empty DoomBuggies; decades ago, Gurr imagined them as a "chain of elephants" moving through the space.

Yet there is always something new to catch the breath, some creature crawling up the leg of a table, some creepy face peering out of the wallpaper. Asked about the process of designing the Gothic southern-plantation mansion, Walt is rumored to have said, "We'll take care of the outside, and the ghosts will take care of the inside."

Link (Thanks, Mark!)
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 Photos Uncategorized 2008 03 02 096  Rr Crossing  Photos Uncategorized 2008 03 02 089
As her UC Davis graduate school thesis, my friend Naomi Adiv is walking the Amtrak Capital Corridor rail line between the San Francisco Bay Area and Sacramento, the state's capital and documenting it. She was inspired by a 5th century English tradition called "beating the bounds," where, according to Wikipedia, the community in a parish would "walk the boundaries of the parish, to share the knowledge of where they lay, and to pray for protection and blessings for the lands." Naomi studies community arts and public space, and I think her project is an exciting hybrid of psychogeography, journalism, cartography, and performance art. Her blog is a raw feed of her photos and field notes. (She's not doing the walk all in one shot.) Naomi says:
In this project, I consider how we “beat the bounds” now... I plan to walk from one end of the region to the other along the tracks, exploring how a seemingly marginal space that seems to serve only as an “in-between” can really be ameaningful place with a life of its own. How do we come to know a place, and what does it mean to know a place in a way different from how its builders intended? Another way of stating this question: how does the experience of walking change one’s notion of a space produced to exclude human participation? How do we re-think and re-purpose landscape and landscapes through embodied practice in our daily lives?

In addition to walking and photographing and blogging, I'm working with artists from across the region to put up an art show in the spring in Davis, reflecting on the space of the railroad in the places where they live and work.
Link
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Wired News reports that the "herbal viagra" spammers like to peddle contain "unnatural chemicals" that "can affect the cardiovascular system or interact with other drugs" and "are quite dangerous."

This isn't too surprising. Spammers would happily sell cyanide to kids if they could make a buck from it. The real reason I liked this story is for the atrocious and infantile puns in the comments section of the story. That said, I think Boing Boing's members can give Wired's members some stiff competition in this department. Link

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The TSA endangered the life of child who has a surgical feeding tube in his stomach by opening up his backup tube, contaminating it. The child pleaded with the TSA officer, who said that she had to open it or refuse to allow the child to board the plane. After an Orlando television station investigated the story, the TSA agreed to look into the incident:
James Hoyne, 14, has a feeding tube in his stomach and carries a back-up in a sealed clear plastic bag. Hoyne said two weeks ago a TSA officer insisted on opening the sterile equipment, contaminating his back-up feeding up tube which he later needed.

"I said 'Please don't open it' and she said 'I have to open it whether you like it or not. If I can't open it, I can't let you on the plane,'" Hoyne said of his conversation with the TSA screener.

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The good folks at Consumerist pranked the "ComplaintRemover" service, a company that promises to game search-engines and use legal harassment to make negative remarks disappear from the net. They got a CSR on a chat line and posed as a cat-breeding site and asked for help eliminating the scourge of LOLCats -- ComplaintRemover blithely promised to get the job done.
CLIENT: How does that work? How are you able to get another company to get rid of something that's part of their business?
Kelly: we push the negative links back in serch engines
Kelly: so nobody will see that ones
CLIENT: So you like make new internets and push the bad internets down
Kelly: yes
CLIENT: My keywords are lolcats
CLIENT: I have a cat breeding business and people keep making pictures of cats with derogatory phrases on them
CLIENT: It's hampering my ability to attract new clients
Link
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Today on Boing Boing tv: A True Historic BBtv Mockumentary on the origin and hating habits of the common Internet Troll, illustrated and narrated by Adam "Ape Lad" Koford. Link to BBtv post, with discussion and downloadable video.

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California will soon enact new legislation around the use of cellphones while driving. Chris Petrell says,
A couple of friends and I were talking recently about cell laws coming up. I know California is about to start requiring hands free devices, but we were unsure about Nevada. So I asked our local sheriff and they did not know off hand, so I looked online.

Here are a few web sites that talk about cellular laws while driving. I don't know how they propose to ban things like the Nextel PTT button, as you have to physically push a button to talk.

Link 1, Link 2.
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Bollywood stars Anupam Kher, Urmila Matondkar, Tabu and Boman Irani are opening a "Bollywood Acting School" in London, to train students for a career in Indian cinema.
The acting school is the outcome of increasing linkages in recent years between Indian films and Britain in terms of story themes, actors, locales and post-production activities.

Several Indian films are shot in Britain every day while regional agencies offer incentives for Indian film producers to shoot and carry out post-production work in their regions.

Kishore Lulla, chairman of Eros International, said that a British Bollywood acting school was overdue.

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week of 03/02/2008

Features Reviews Videos

Comments
  • "Tension. Feeling the familiar pull, I drop into sublight, the stars like embers from a stamped fire. She’s there, three light minutes from the hole and dropping fast, her obsidian hull stretching with the tide. She flashes anger and dismay. I flash sorrow and regret. She flashes longing, but it’s nearly attenuated into resignation. I flash love, though it will never reach her as she falls endlessly toward the infinite depth. The tension gone now, leaving a lonely shell, an echo of what should have been. Wha..."
  • "An eye pressed against the porthole of the space station, his senses could barely comprehend the vision of wonder prancing happily across the Earth’s distant upper atmosphere. Its sleek, powerful body was streaked with a myriad of colors; its long flowing mane shimmered much like the station’s refuse did upon encountering the mesosphere. Most spectacular was the silver beacon of hope adorning its forehead – to simply look upon it was to fill one’s heart with the warmth of a thousand suns. Light, purpose, ..."
  • "Typing is difficult when you can't separate your words. So that's why I went looking into the cracks and crevices on my keyboard. I noticed a particularly large gap and I peeked inside. More depth was apparent than I would have expected, and upon closer examination, I realized that a pair of eyes was staring back at me. "So that's why I always lose at computer chess," I said to myself. In between my command keys, along the lower crevice of my space bar, I had found Bobby Fischer, neither dead nor in Jap..."
  • ""Hey dude, have you seen my wallet?" "Where'd you last have it?" "I dunno, I still had it after we went and got coffee this morning." "I dunno then bro, have you check all your pockets?" "I'll check again." A moment passes. "Nope, nothing. I've checked everywhere." "I'm out of ideas yo, is it with your cellphone? Try calling your phone." "My phone is here. Crap. Aw man this sucks. I hate losing shit… Oh wait, I think I know where it is, be right back." More time passes. "I found it!" "Cool. Wher..."
  • "In silence of deep space I drift My breath the only sound as I approach the timeless rift Sterile blackness does surround Demons haunt the inner realms Found within my head My body starved and shriveled ‘neath this suit I cannot shed It’s been five days I’ve drifted loose Not bound for far nor near Drinking naught but urine juice I’d kill for icy beer An alien approaches me Shaped like an evil moth I twist and kick and swing my knee yell for him to bugger off His mouth crushes with an evil stink Foun..."
  • "Somewhere, on some arbitrary landmass, on an only-somewhat-special blue, blotchy orb hurtling around a not-very-noteworthy star, a woman sits and cries. She wears a shapeless earth-toned dress and dirt is smudged at the crevices on her cheeks and forehead. For 18 years she’d been important to this arbitrary chunk of land, to the blue orb on which it sat, and a voice in the expanding universe of which she knew nothing. She lost every bit of those 18 years and more when they took her son, but telling his sto..."
  • "Phenocopy's comment #24 is bang on. Mortality rates are fairly irrelevant without considering prevalence rates. H1N1 has a low mortality rate, but I'm willing to bet that it will kill a lot more people in my city this year than, say, pneumonic anthrax. Or smallpox. A case fatality rate of 0.2% still makes a large number of fatal cases if you infect a million people or so. It's also worth noting that H1N1 has greater potential to disrupt healthcare in general than seasonal flu does. In a normal year the typ..."
  • ""You never should've left," she says to me. I get up to pour another cup of coffee. "More?" "Please." She holds up her mug waiting for me, smiling in that familiar way. "You know I couldn't refuse such an opportunity. I took some pictures from up there, one of our house that I think you'd like." I set my mug down and dig through my bag. "You missed so much back here. Kayla spent most of the time you were gone with a goldfish bowl on her head, pretending to walk in low gravity." I stop rummaging and lift my ..."
  • "Space? Space is long gone. There’s no space out here. Every frequency is jam-screamin’-packed with compressed x-clusters beaming out in every direction. Proprietary software in my AQ-951 console automatically traces the signals to Earth, displaying the ratatat bursts of fiery prophets, panty salesmen, and whatever other freak that can get its hands on a transmitter as pleasantly color-coded sine waves jitterbugging away. My ship and I get out a bit. Way out. Maybe I’m just seeking emptiness – maybe th..."
  • "No one knew how they’d gotten there. It had been confirmed by nearly every observatory in the country, and it had been splashed all over the news, the internet the tweet-o-sphere, the blog-o-scope. They’d found everything - floating in a vast ring stretching way around the solar system, just past the no-longer-a-planet Pluto was everything that had ever been lost. Car keys, wallets, odd socks, everything that had ever fallen down behind a couch, slid under the fridge or slipped through a hole in your po..."

 

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