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June 26, 2008
a day later » June 27, 2008
Rogue archivist Carl Malamud sez,
Those of you following the saga of the sell-off of the federal legislative histories by the General Accountability Office might be interested in some good news and some bad news.

The good news is they have released 619,000 pages of histories, which were the pilot project scans they conducted. Looking at this data shows just how incredibly valuable these legislative histories are and how wonderfully talented the government employees are who compiled the information.

The bad news is the government *gave* millions of dollars worth of help to Thomson West which is raking in the bucks with the big database. In response to the data release by GAO, we have countered by offering to have scanned, at no direct cost to GAO, the same docs they gave to Thomson West. All we want is their hand-me-downs to give to a deserving public.

Link (Thanks, Carl!)

See also: Did the US gov't sell exclusive access to its legislative history to Thomson West?
GAO has sold exclusive access to legislative history down the river to Thomson West

Top 10 TED Talks

Today on Boing Boing Gadgets

Today on Boing Boing Gadgets, we played with a cheap retro console clone; imagined riding the NOAH concept monocycle; listened as a Roboclarinet played "Flight of the Bumblebee"; and gaped at Dell's sudden interest in good industrial design.

John explored a server room built into ladies' room's handicapped stall by cassette-tape lamp-light; Rob tallied Sir James Dyson's awesomeness index; and Joel found a tiny universal remote.

A pistol camera shoots while you shoot; a new Vertu phone design looks like an ugly shoe; HP Touchsmart IQ506 is not an iMaclone; and Akai's latest MIDI machines look cool—and expensive! If you're boring, try Archimedes' Drill. If you're wanting turn-by-turn directions, Apple would like a word with you. John's destiny is found in the Boom Arm Starbase Workstation; Joel, however, is doomed to slay Nerf werewolves and vampires forever; Rob shall obliterate the need for universal remotes. Only Intel did anything sensible: it's saying no way to Vista.

rocket-stove.jpg

When I visited Kelly Coyne and Erik Knutzen of Homegrown Evolution last week they showed me the rocket stove they made in their backyard. Theirs is quite fancy because it is made of bricks. They sometimes use their rocket stove to fry a meal in a skillet.

The rocket stove was invented about 10 years ago by Dr. Larry Winiarski at the Aprovecho Research Center in Oregon. It consists of an elbow-shaped combustion chamber (usually made from metal cans) surrounded by insulating material (often a large can filled with sand). It uses twigs for fuel, so it's ideal for areas where the trees have been depleted.

Here's a video from the Aprovecho Research Center that shows how to make a rocket stove.

200806261447.jpg Here are the first 3 of 10 rocket stove principles, by Larry Winiarski.

1.) Insulate, particularly the combustion chamber, with low mass, heatresistant materials in order to keep the fire as hot as possible and not toheat the higher mass of the stove body.

2.) Within the stove body, above the combustion chamber, use an insulated,upright chimney of a height that is about two or three times the diameterbefore extracting heat to any surface (griddle, pots, etc.).

3.) Heat only the fuel that is burning (and not too much). Burn the tips ofsticks as they enter the combustion chamber, for example. The object is NOTto produce more gasses or charcoal than can be cleanly burned at the powerlevel desired.

Illustration from In the Wake, a cool website on various simple off-the-grid tools.
Last year, Joel Johnson and BBtv visited the International Cryptozoology Museum in Maine, a multi-room cabinet of curiosities filled with artifacts, ephemera, and oddities related to "hidden animals," mythical beasts, and creatures unknown to science. The curator of the museum is Loren Coleman, known to BB readers for his terrific contributions to our site, his many books, and his blogging at Cryptomundo. Sadly, the International Cryptozoology Museum is in dire straits. According to Loren, he's caught up in a complicated IRS audit that, he says, initially began with a challenge of "the reality of 'cryptozoology' as an occupation." Then the museum itself apparently was called into question. Now, Loren is seeking $15,000 in donations to keep the International Cryptozoology Museum alive and move it to a new location. From his post:
To the IRS, the museum verges on being a hobby (as per Code 183), and it needs more income (even if donations) to support itself, on its own. To me, the merging between my interviews, the book sales that come out of the museum appearances, and the visibility of the museum on the net are all interwoven. I've never had a great income since I was laid off from adjunct teaching, but combined together, I live at the cryptozoology poverty level with no complaints. But to the IRS, the museum is a separate entity. I understand now, and must comply with that view. I've lost my appeal on my "merge" view.

No fighting this any longer, for I stand fully enlightened about how the IRS is viewing Code 183, as it applies to my life's career. The museum has to make money, or it ceases to exist.
Save the Cryptozoology Museum, Buy Loren Coleman's books

Previously on BB:
Boing Boing tv: Cryptozoology with Loren Coleman
Inside Loren Coleman's Cryptozoology Museum

Uncombable Hair Syndrome

Pili trianguli et canaliculi is a rare genetic disease also known as "uncombable hair syndrome" and "spun glass hair." From an abstract in the medical journal Ultrastructural Pathology (photo from The World's Fair blog):
 3172 2612405338 0F265Fc152 Both inherited (autosomal dominant and recessive with variable levels of penetrance) and sporadic forms of uncombable hair syndrome have been described, both being characterized by scalp hair that is impossible to comb due to the haphazard arrangement of the hair bundles. A characteristic morphologic feature of hair in this syndrome is a triangular to reniform to heart shape on cross-sections, and a groove, canal or flattening along the entire length of the hair in at least 50% of hairs examined by scanning electron microscopy. Most individuals are affected early in childhood and the hair takes on a spun-glass appearance with the hair becoming dry, curly, glossy, lighter in color, and progressively uncombable. Only the scalp hair is affected.
Uncombable Hair Sydrome on Wikipedia, Uncombable Hair Syndrome on The World's Fair blog
 Pcam695 The Pistol Cam creates lasting memories of life's most precious moments. Rob has more at Boing Boing Gadgets.
Pistol Cam
200806261030.jpg

Gallery of photos of a giant plucked chicken sculpture.

Attention Chicken! is a three dimensional version of the collage that goes by the same title.

Nicolas Lampert and Micaela O’Herlihy created a ten-foot rotisserie chicken out of polystyrene foam, hard coated, and then painted with latex paint and final coat of high gloss varnish.

In October, 2006 Attention Chicken! made a number of unannounced public interventions throughout Milwaukee at Bradford Beach, the woods, Walmart, National Ave, and other locations throughout the city. Reactions ranged from laughter to attacks directed at the chicken (three in one day!)

Attention Chicken (via wtbw)
Last night I listened to a New Yorker podcast interviewing Atul Gawande, author of an article in the latest issue about itching. It's fascinating.
“Scratching is one of the sweetest gratifications of nature, and as ready at hand as any,” Montaigne wrote. “But repentance follows too annoyingly close at its heels.” For M., certainly, it did: the itching was so torturous, and the area so numb, that her scratching began to go through the skin. At a later office visit, her doctor found a silver-dollar-size patch of scalp where skin had been replaced by scab. M. tried bandaging her head, wearing caps to bed. But her fingernails would always find a way to her flesh, especially while she slept.

One morning, after she was awakened by her bedside alarm, she sat up and, she recalled, “this fluid came down my face, this greenish liquid.” She pressed a square of gauze to her head and went to see her doctor again. M. showed the doctor the fluid on the dressing. The doctor looked closely at the wound. She shined a light on it and in M.’s eyes. Then she walked out of the room and called an ambulance. Only in the Emergency Department at Massachusetts General Hospital, after the doctors started swarming, and one told her she needed surgery now, did M. learn what had happened. She had scratched through her skull during the night—and all the way into her brain.

Read "The Itch" | Listen to interview with "The Itch" author Atul Gawande
Remains of a rare giant squid turned up off the coast of Santa Cruz, California yesterday. According to researchers from the Pelagic Shark Research Foundation, this specimen was probably 25 feet long and weighed hundreds of pounds when alive. Only one giant squid has ever been caught on video alive. From the Santa Cruz Sentinel:
 Live Media Site6 2008 0626 20080626  20080626 Local13~02 Gallery A flock of gulls feeding on the carcass alerted the crew to the remains. Their first thought, said crew members, was that the animal was a seal but after motoring closer to it they recognized the chewed-up squid...

(Giant squid expert and Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History curator Eric) Hochberg said there's likely several squid along the California coast, but because the animal swims at depths of thousands of feet, it's almost never seen and difficult to study...

"The animal is just so big and so rare ... it's very easy for people to get a little nervous about what it is, and the stories go from there," Hochberg said.
Giant squid (Thanks, Vann Hall!)

Previously on BB:
Giant squid caught on film for first time
Giant plastinated squid
Giant squid bag by Gama-Go
Julian Sanchez of The American Prospect writes that the House Democrats who say the FISA bill they voted for is a "compromise" are liars, unless you define "'compromise" as a "shameful or disreputable concession,' which fits the deal brokered by Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) to a tee."
The award for the most bald-faced lie on the House floor Friday, however, goes to Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), who insisted that the bill "does not allow warrantless surveillance of Americans." She is wrong. It does.

The broader spying powers given to the executive branch by the compromise bill require intelligence agencies to "target" foreigners. But if those foreign "targets" happen to call or e-mail Americans, those communications are fair game. And since the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court is only permitted to review the broad targeting procedures government eavesdroppers use to determine that a target is abroad, and not the substantive basis for authorizing surveillance of any target, anyone is a potential target.

The bill, in other words, allows the government to conduct "vacuum cleaner" surveillance -- sweeping up international traffic willy-nilly -- then filter it for anything that looks interesting. Indeed, many believe that licensing such surveillance is precisely the point of this legislation. If so, "warrantless surveillance of Americans" could well become routine, whether or not they are the formal "targets" of eavesdropping.

Democrats Capitulate on FISA (via Reason)

Previously on Boing Boing:
Obama's support for the FISA "compromise"

 Media Gallery B780E0B4-D09E-56A5-De70434Cd70Dfd84 3-1
Last month, the open source 3D printer RepRap made the first successful copy of itself. And it's not the only 3D printer technology emerging from the workshops of ingenious makers. Over at SciAm.com, JR Minkel posts a slideshow of five machines to "print" 3D objects, including the RepRap, Fab@Home, and, seen here, the amazing Candy Fab from Evil Mad Scientist Labs. The Candy Fab prints objects by fusing layers of sugar. 3D Printers

Previously on BB:
RepRap universal constructor achieves self-replication
Build a fabricator at home
3D printing comes to Sears
200806261000.jpg

Natalie Zee Drieu of Craft found this tutorial on knitting Spock ears with leftover sock yarn.

The New York Times' David Pogue answers a letter from an anonymous writer who says he or she is "about to enter a somewhat public life." Here's an excerpt:
A) How many wackos do you hear from in a day?
B) How do you handle said wackos?

(A) I don’t hear from that many wackos. Maybe about one a month. (That’s if you define “wacko” as “someone who rants incoherently.” If you mean “someone who disagrees with you,” then the answer is, “daily.”)

(B) If the person is obviously deranged or pretending to be, I don’t reply. Otherwise, I try to send at least a brief response.

Not everyone is happy with that degree of engagement. After reading one reader’s six-page account of his customer-service nightmare, I wrote back, “What a horror story. So sorry to hear it!” But the reader, evidently having expected me to take up his cause personally, wrote back simply, “**** you, too.” (Swear word omitted.)

E-Mail Etiquette for Public Figures

This singer is so infatuated with his own performance that he neglects to notice that a woman is stuck to him. (via Arbroath)

Today on Boing Boing tv, Cory performs a reading from his new novel Little Brother. This reading (from chapter 3, part 1) is the second in an ongoing BBtv series.

Link to Boing Boing tv post with discussion, downloadable video, and instructions for subscribing to the BBtv video podcast feed.


Josh Harris, founder of Jupiter Communications and, later, Pseudo.com, forwarded a letter to Boing Boing today in which he proclaims to the New York Times that "Pseudo was a fake company," and that the entire enterprise was "an elaborate piece of performance art."

Why did he address this to the NYT? Mr. Harris claims many of the news articles which established a perception of legitimacy for the once high-flying internet video startup -- the sort of legitimacy that helped encourage investors to part with tens of millions of dollars -- were written by now-disgraced NYT writer Jayson Blair, who was forced to resign in 2003 after having been caught plagiarizing and faking content in his stories for the paper.

"I suggest you do a NYT archive search and find the four articles written by Jayson; search terms: josh harris jayson blair," says Harris.

If you're not familiar with Pseudo (and Harris') significance during the late '90s internet bubble, here are a few profile links: NY Mag, Wired, Radar, Wikipedia, BusinessWeek. His online experiment "We Live in Public" predated the era of now ubiquitous always-on lifecasting video sites.

Journalists used words like "wild, Warholian," "oddball," "dot-com playboy extraordinaire" and "golden boy" to describe Harris during the Pseudo era; also "crazy."

The man who replaced Harris as CEO at Pseudo was David Bohrman, now an executive at CNN overseeing the network's election coverage in Washington.

Harris sends this to Boing Boing from Sidamo, Ethiopia (see snapshot above, with his almost-ripe coffee plants), where he moved shortly after selling his most recent creation, Operator 11. If he looks a little under the weather, that's because, as he explains, he's been fighting a fever there for the past few weeks; he says he's there "working on a documentary about the 'Great Ethiopian Nation.'"

Here is Harris' letter, which continues after the jump:

I now acknowledge that Pseudo Programs, Inc., a New York City based Internet television network founded in 1994 and sold from bankruptcy in 2000 was the linchpin of a long form piece of conceptual art. Pseudo burned over $25 million in private and institutional capital over a span of seven years. Pseudo was a fake company.

I believe that the then New York Times reporter Jayson Blair was actively following my work and onto my game (taking one to know one). The last article Mr. Blair wrote about me was entitled Dot-Com Executive, Once a Conjurer of Silicon Alley Razzmatazz, Logs Off (Jayson Blair, March 4, 2001). For that interview Mr. Blair requested that we meet in the empty back room of Sardi’s (the first time I recall meeting him face-to-face) and then basically winked at Andy Morris (my publicity agent) and I for over an hour. Previously Mr. Blair mentioned or quoted me in three other articles.

Does the New York Times have an ethical responsibility to its readers to contact ad infinitum, ad nauseam every single source that touched Mr. Blair’s writing when the integrity of its reporting is at stake? Did someone at the New York Times Corporation contact each and every person that Mr. Blair wrote about?

The British government has scrapped a(n insane) plan to bring "airport style" security measures to the nation's train stations -- a plan that would have required the millions who board the overland rail system every day to have their bags X-rayed, go through metal detectors (and, presumably, remove their shoes and get rid of their liquids).
A trial found that introducing airport-style checks would be impractical and antagonise the public.

The transport minister, Tom Harris, said the public would not accept the resulting delays and there would be objections about personal privacy if an extensive screening regime was introduced.

"Screening equipment and dogs can be effective in the railway environment," said Harris in a written statement to parliament. "However, given the very large passenger flows and thousands of entry points on the UK rail and underground networks, 100% airport-style screening is currently not feasible."

Link
For the 150th anniversary issue of The Bookseller (the world's oldest publishing trade magazine), the editors commissioned me to write a short-short story about the next 150 years of book sales. The result is called The Right Book, and it's out in the current edition and online as well.
The thing that Arthur liked best about owning his own shop was that he could stock whatever he pleased, and if you didn't like it, you could just shop somewhere else. So there in the window were four ancient Cluedo sets rescued from a car-boot sale in Sussex; a pair of trousers sewn from a salvaged WWII bivouac tent; a small card advertising the availability of artisanal truffles hand made by an autistically gifted chocolatier in Islington; a brick of Pu'er tea that had been made in Guyana by a Chinese family who'd emigrated a full century previous; and, just as of now, six small, handsomely made books.

The books were a first for Arthur. He'd always loved reading the things, but he'd worked at bookshops before opening his own little place in Bow, and he knew the book-trade well enough to stay well away. They were bulky, these books, and low-margin (Low margin? Two-for-three titles actually *lost* money!), and honestly, practically no one read books anymore and what they did read was mostly rubbish. Selling books depressed Arthur.

These little buggers were different, though. He reached into the window -- the shop was so small he could reach it without leaving his stool behind the till -- and plucked one out and handed it to the kid who'd just asked for it. She was about 15, with awkward hair and skin and posture and so on, but the gleam in her eye that said, "Where have you been all my life?" as he handed her the book.

Link to page 1/2, Link to page 3

Update: You asked, they listened! Here's the story in text form!


Deeplinking has collected the paper sketches that gave birth to Twitter, Flickr, Vimeo, Abiword, mySociety, and others. Shown here, an early Twitter (stat.us) sketch, from Jack Dorsey's Flickr stream. My own contribution to the archiving of this stuff are my pics of Raph Koster's original, hand-drawn Ultima Online map. Link (via Waxy)

Malware bots as papercraft


In order to raise awareness about the various malicious bots looking to colonize your computer via the net, Symantec/Norton have whomped up a couple of downloadable cute malware papercraft bots for you to cut, fold and glue. Available are the Identity Theft Bot and the Extortion Bot. Link (Thanks, Kenn!)

Orwell's 1984 as a pulp novel


Jason, "I just blogged about a wonderfully lurid and pulpish book cover for Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four, published in 1954 by Signet, that I happened to randomly find on Amazon. Significant is the artwork and over-the-top copy on the back, which is quite different from almost every other edition of this novel that I've seen." Link (Thanks, Jason!)
Bruce Schneier's new Wired column discusses the growing trend to designing devices so that other people can shut them down against your will -- the movie theater can mute your phone, OnStar can shut down your engine, new technology deployed to stop the movie-plot threat of bus-hijackers ramming them into buildings can be used to shut down bus-engines.

Bottom line: a device designed to be controlled and shut down against its owner's wishes is inherently less secure than a device that is designed to only do the stuff its owner asks of it. This is like the hoary cliche of the accidentally pressed self-destruct button on the spaceship in bad sf movies: wouldn't the spaceship be inherently safer if none of its intentional design outcomes included sudden, catastrophic explosion?

It's comparatively easy to make this work in closed specialized systems -- OnStar, airplane avionics, military hardware -- but much more difficult in open-ended systems. If you think Microsoft's vision could possibly be securely designed, all you have to do is look at the dismal effectiveness of the various copy-protection and digital-rights-management systems we've seen over the years. That's a similar capabilities-enforcement mechanism, albeit simpler than these more general systems.

And that's the key to understanding this system. Don't be fooled by the scare stories of wireless devices on airplanes and in hospitals, or visions of a world where no one is yammering loudly on their cellphones in posh restaurants. This is really about media companies wanting to exert their control further over your electronics. They not only want to prevent you from surreptitiously recording movies and concerts, they want your new television to enforce good "manners" on your computer, and not allow it to record any programs. They want your iPod to politely refuse to copy music a computer other than your own. They want to enforce their legislated definition of manners: to control what you do and when you do it, and to charge you repeatedly for the privilege whenever possible.

Link

glados.jpgYesterday at Boing Boing Gadgets, everyone forgot to do "Today at Boing Boing Gadgets" because they were too busy playing with Syd Mead's Blade Runner LEGO car. Ebullience, however, was deflated by Kanye West threatening to cap our asses with his MacBook Air. So we reported on serious news for a spell: we looked at the possibility of third-party Xbox 360s, the planned obsolescence of JVCs newest HDTVs with built-in iPod docks and discovered that expensive lithium batteries are more cost-effective than cheap alkalines.

Also in the news: Ubuntu is released for mobile internet devices. iTunes must not, repeat, must not be used as a weapon of mass destruction. A pair of vacuum cleaner house shoes. Ring tones only dogs can hear. A $100,000, sensory-depriving egg for your solipsistic gaming pleasure. Electric vehicles coming to the UK en masse. GLaDOS releases a wacky Falcon controller. Operation: key-chain edition!

Also, always remember: YOUR REPORT MATTER to Yahoo!

Link

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June 26, 2008
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Recent Comments

  • " "wind,solar, tidal and geothermal may eventually meet our domestic needs, but what will aeroplanes and ships use, batteries?" The US Navy is currently developing all-electric ships: http://www.nationaldefensemagazine.org/archive/2007/November/Pages/All-Electric2453.aspx Electric-lift planes, while still in the realm of science fiction, are nonetheless plausible: "They saw the plane as it swooped. They saw it clearly by the eerie blue glow around its repulsors, gulping vast quantities of air into elect..."
  • "#5 & #6 - but I do sell pictures... and the Rebel is just my point and shoot. I shall not get into the semantics of 'fancier rigs' nor the overuse of the word 'professional'. I believe there is a BB post somewhere re the professional wedding photographer that sums it up re my take on these pictures. Ergo, getting paid does may make you a professional but does not necessarily mean they are any good. I seem to recall that Van Gogh did not sell any paintings during his lifetime (apart from one to his brother ..."
  • "Sooo ... we all recognize this from Ren and Stimpy, right? ..."
  • "I'd love to be the sub-minimum-wage earning maid at the home that shelled out the bucks on that sucker!..."
  • "And what about the check-out cards in the pockets in the backs of books? Other than an overseas highschool in 2003, I haven't seen a library using those in about a decade. Sometimes, at a used book store, I'll find a library cast-off with the pocket and card still there. I treasure them...."
  • "I'm siding with Halloween Jack on this one. His comment about Creed sealed the deal...."
  • "I blame the incoherence of the political perspective on objectivism, which mixes the truth and fiction, much like religion or a cult. Alan Greenspan is the endproduct of that problem, which is why having him control the economy was so ironic and tragic at the same time. That being said, between Daredevil and Martha Washington, not to mention Hardboiled, Frank Miller has secured his place in at least American comic history. One of the things that make Martha Washington so remarkable was its willingness to sk..."
  • "$63 is a very good price, too. Dark Horse may not be a large as Marvel or DC, but they sound off like they have a pair. ..."
  • "HotPepperMan at #4 doesn't seem to understand the meaning of the word "professional". Hint: your fancy camera -- and I suspect that this guy owns a a lot fancier rigs than yours -- doesn't make you a "pro", talent and the selling that talent does. ..."
  • "@22: THe first 50,000 words are "Themepunks" -- the next 135,000 words are new material...."