week of 10/19/2008

LiveJournaller Penwiper337 set to explore the "librarian side of steampunk" by turning a stack of old crummy hardcover books into a beautiful purse:
I had my eye on some attractively bound Reader's Digest Condensed Books (I have no pity for them) that were in the local library book sale, but wanted a little more space than one book could give me. So I made a box-type purse out of three.

I started by cutting out the attractive endpapers for future use, then coated the text block edges with thinned-down school glue (using wax paper to keep them separate from the covers). Use plenty of weights on the books while they dry or they will warp! I then hollowed out the text blocks, as well as the bottom cover of the top book, both covers of the middle book, and the top cover of the bottom book. I gave the interiors of the text blocks several cots of thinned down glue, then glued them to their respective covers with school glue (leaving the top cover unglued to act as the lid of the purse. E6000 glue was used to glue the stacked books together into a solid block.

Book purse (via Craft)
Wikipedia for Schools is a torrentable DVD version of Wikipedia that you can run on classroom PCs that aren't connected to the net. It's also a handy size for sticking on a memory card and plugging into your phone or netbook.
Welcome to this Wikipedia Selection. This 2008/9 Wikipedia DVD Selection is a free, hand-checked, non-commercial selection from Wikipedia, targeted around the UK National Curriculum and useful for much of the English speaking world. It has about 5500 articles (as much as can be fitted on a DVD with good size images) and is about the size of a twenty volume encyclopaedia (34,000 images and 20 million words). Articles were chosen from a list ranked by importance and quality generated by project members. This list of articles was then manually sorted for relevance to children, and adult topics were removed. Compared to the 2007 version some six hundred articles were removed and two thousand more relevant articles (of now adequate quality) were added. SOS Children volunteers then checked and tidied up the contents, first by selecting historical versions of articles free from vandalism and then by removing unsuitable sections. External links and references are also not included since it was infeasible to check all of these.
2008/9 Wikipedia Selection for schools (via Waxy)

Barack Hussein Obama II


Clayton Cubitt tells Boing Boing,

Rachel Hulin (former photo editor at Nerve) is doing get-out-the-vote in battleground state Wisconsin, and documents this choice example of anti-Obama propaganda flyers being stuffed in mailboxes, in the guise of a letter directly from "Barack Hussein Obama II."
Wisconsin Day Two: Barack Hussein Obama II (rachelhulin.com)

Joshua Gill says: "Last year I went to a Korean Folk village in Suwon, South Korea. I took some video and put it on Youtube, this one is my favorite but you're welcome to browse around. "

Korean kids jumping really high on a teeter totter


Alex Pham of the LA Times wrote a piece about a typewriter repair shop in Los Angeles that's enjoying a small resurgence.

The simplicity of the typewriter is alluring to writers who may be overwhelmed (or underwhelmed) by increasingly elaborate technology. A typewriter is also appealing in its transparency -- whack a key, and watch the typebar smack a letter onto a piece of paper. Try figuring that out with a laser printer. Many people also find typewriters charming ambassadors of a bygone era. One recent customer asked Flores to fix her mother's college typewriter so she could type letters home when she went off to college.

All that helps to keep U.S. Office Machine humming at its inconspicuous corner of Figueroa Street and Avenue 58. Watch the video to see how three generations of the Flores family have helped keep the typewriting tradition alive.

Typewriter stays relevant in technology-saturated world
Brandon McClelland, 24, was dragged to death beneath a truck driven by two white men in Paris, Texas last month. McClelland was black. The site of his death is about 200 miles from the location where James Byrd was murdered in a similar manner ten years ago. (Image at left: Jacqueline McClelland, Brandon's mother; photo courtesy Jesse Muhammad.)

McClelland's murder took place on September 16, 2008. Parts of his mangled body were found strewn along the highway at great distance.

First responders treated the case as a hit and run. The county district attorney's office denied the possibility of racist motivations, and said comparisons to the Byrd lynching were "preposterous."

The incident was reported in the local newspaper, which later followed with this editorial.

Some bloggers and news sites associated with the Nation of Islam [ * ] have been discussing the killing as a hate crime for weeks, and claim local law enforcement ignored key forensic evidence at the crime scene.

Howard Witt at the Chicago Tribune, who has covered related stories about racial injustice and hate crimes in this region, wrote about the case as a possible hate crime earlier this month.

The story of McClelland's death -- and allegations the investigation by (white) local police investigators was botched -- seems to be gaining broader attention after having been picked up by AP today: Another Dragging Death In Texas (Associated Press).

Snip from a related story about racism in Paris, Texas, also from Witt at the Chicago Tribune:

The public fairgrounds in this small east Texas town look ordinary enough, like so many other well-worn county fair sites across the nation. Unless you know the history of the place. There are no plaques or markers to denote it, but several of the most notorious public lynchings of black Americans in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries were staged at the Paris Fairgrounds, where thousands of white spectators would gather to watch and cheer as black men were dragged onto a scaffold, scalded with hot irons and finally burned to death or hanged.
One of the most widely-publicized lynchings of a black person in American history took place there 115 years ago. On February 1, 1893, former slave Henry Smith was tortured to death in front of a crowd of ten thousand (mostly or entirely white) people. Here is the New York Times article from that day, documenting the brutal details of his death in explicit detail.

The child’s father, her brother, and two uncles then gathered about the Negro as he lay fastened to the torture platform and thrust hot irons into his quivering flesh. It was horrible—the man dying by slow torture in the midst of smoke from his own burning flesh. Every groan from the fiend, every contortion of his body was cheered by the thickly packed crowd of 10,000 persons. The mass of beings 600 yards in diameter, the scaffold being the center. After burning the feet and legs, the hot irons—plenty of fresh ones being at hand—were rolled up and down Smith’s stomach, back, and arms. Then the eyes were burned out and irons were thrust down his throat.

Another snip from that century-old NYT story, which presumed Smith was guilty, and deserved the lynching:
Whisky shops were closed, unruly mobs were dispersed, schools were dismissed by a proclamation from the mayor, and everything was done in a business-like manner.
ANOTHER NEGRO BURNED; HENRY SMITH DIES AT THE STAKE. DRAWN THROUGH THE STREETS ON A CAR -- TORTURED FOR NEARLY AN HOUR WITH HOT IRONS AND THEN BURNED -- AWFUL VENGEANCE OF A PARIS (TEXAS) MOB (NYT)

Update: BB commenter JWB nails it:

This must be viewed in light of the Ashley Todd incident this week. Todd made up a false story that a black man attacked her and carved a "B" in her face, ostensibly because she supports John McCain. In Paris, Texas, a hundred years ago, a charge like that would get a black man burned alive. Today it doesn't go quite that far but you could see the shadow of the lynch mob forming in the darker corners of the right-wing blogosphere when the Todd story first circulated.
The Southern Poverty Law Center has an interactive map of racist organizations and businesses (think: White Pride record stores, KKK branches) in this part of Texas, which you can view here. [ * ] Incidentally, SLPC also categorizes the Nation of Islam and the New Black Panther Party as "hate groups."

Previously on Boing Boing: The Last Lynching: Ted Koppel documentary on Discovery tonight


Typhon Vol. 1

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Danny Hellman is a terrific illustrator who contributed a lot of work to bOING bOING, the print zine. He recently set me a copy of a comic anthology he edited and published called Typhon and I'm impressed by the quality of the large cast of contributors.

The stories in Typhon focus on some heavy themes, and aren't for the squeamish. On of my favorite stories is a near the front of this fat anthology, called "Hail Jeffrey" by Hans Rickheit. The seven-page comic is about a child dictator who takes pleasure in destroying the lives of everyone around him, and nobody dares stop him. In fact, they assist help him in his efforts to make others miserable. It's like an NC-17 version of The Twilight Zone's "It's a Good Life," only the Billy Mumy character gets all his power from the fear of everyone around him.

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Of course, Hellman's contribution to the book is one of the best. Here's a sample page. (Click for full size). I have always loved his clean line work.

Typhon, Vol. 1

deal-cover.jpgMy friend Joe Hutsko contacted with the intriguing offer to serialize his novel, The Deal, on Boing Boing. I jumped at the chance. I read The Deal when it first came out in 1999 and loved the thrilling story about a Apple-like company's undertaking to create an iPhone-like device.

Here's a link to Chapter 21 as a PDF or a text file. (Here's chapter 1 and an introduction to the book, and here are the previous chapters)

To buy a paperback copy of the book, visit JOEyGADGET or purchase directly from Amazon.

deal-cover.jpgMy friend Joe Hutsko contacted with the intriguing offer to serialize his novel, The Deal, on Boing Boing. I jumped at the chance. I read The Deal when it first came out in 1999 and loved the thrilling story about a Apple-like company's undertaking to create an iPhone-like device.

Here's a link to Chapter 20 as a PDF or a text file. (Here's chapter 1 and an introduction to the book, and here are the previous chapters)

To buy a paperback copy of the book, visit JOEyGADGET or purchase directly from Amazon.

Tales of cranky book sellers

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Bookride presents an enjoyable series of anecdotes about crabby booksellers.

One must not forget the Birmingham dealer, who on being asked for a discount for books would tear them in half in front of the customer. What particularly irked him was the phrase 'What can you do on this?' A red mist would descend and he would reply 'I'll show you what I can do on this...' and tore up the book. One imagines that this was selective, possibly only books under £20. Not a wise business stratagem but probably quite satisfying...
This bookdealer reminds me of my beloved friend Loretta. About 10 years ago she had a garage sale. Carla and I were there and we watched as some guy tried to talk her into selling an ashtray, priced at 25 cents, for a dime. Loretta wouldn't budge, and the guy kept pestering her. Finally Loretta whacked the ashtray on a table, breaking it in two. "I said no!" she told the guy. The expression on the guy's face is one of my fondest memories. Yet more Bastards with Bookshops

USB flash drive skull ring

 En News Pics 16879 Usb Key Skull Ring 001  En News Pics 16879 Usb Key Skull Ring 007
Solid Alliance has introduced a USB flash drive in the form of a skull ring. It has a capacity of 2GB, sells for $150 from Geek Stuff 4 U, and comes in a variety of fashionable colors. Skull flash drive (Thanks, Kirsten Anderson!)

UPDATE: Previously on BB:
Lucky Charms Leprechaun Goes Goth

Here's a funny video for Cintra Wilson's brilliant new book, Caligula for President.

Previously on Boing Boing:
Read chapter 1 of Caligula for President


Here's a video of our guest blogger John Hodgman giving his wonderful presentation at TED in February 2008. John Hodgman: A brief digression on matters of lost time

Wassup 2008


Wassup 2008: A brilliant parody short from 60frames. If this means nothing to you, go here, then here, then here. Update: apparently this is the original cast, reunited. Wow, cool. (via Clayton Cubitt, via @brianoberkirch)


John Moe, host of American Public Media's Weekend America radio show, tells Boing Boing:

For Weekend America's Halloween show this year we invited some writers to come up with scary stories that last no longer than half a minute. We did it last year too and it was lots of fun. I figure scary stories are fun but honestly who has time for the whole "he walked down the hall, step...by...step" nonsense, GET TO THE ACTION, I always say.

So this year we have an interesting crew: David Rakoff, Dana Gould, comics creator Richard Sala, a children's book writer, a horror writer, all adhering to the strict 30 seconds or less rule.

It's on the air tomorrow or found online here: Tales of Terror. Here's last year's edition, which featured Neil Gaiman among others.

(photo: peasap, via weekendamerica.publicradio.org)

BB pal Nate Tyler has been working on the Obama campaign in Pennsylvania for the last few weeks. He's in Scranton, and he shares this with us:

We just came across this amazing artist in rural PA who, with a group of local artist friends, painted a large-scale replica of the Obama Hope poster in his field. I was just out there and it's pretty amazing.
Field of Hope (my.barackobama.com)

HOWTO make a Cylon pumpkin

Cylonpumpkin The latest MAKE: Weekend Project video guides you in the creation of an old-school Battlestar Galactica Cylon pumpkin complete with the scanning LED eye.
Cylon Jack O' Lantern
LAST NIGHT, I was talking to some people in our nation's capital about THE BATTLE OF GALACTICA.

(I was talking to them the way I normally talk to people, BEHIND A PODIUM, USING A MICROPHONE.)

As I trust you recall, this was a dark ride on the Universal Studios Tour in the early eighties that was ENTIRELY NON FICTIONAL, and which I visited when I was a human child. The ride was a BSG 1.0 tie-in in which your Universal Studios tram is captured by Cylons who apparently are attempting to invade the San Fernando Valley. They then hold your tram hostage in a makeshift space station, shooting their lasers around until you are rescued by two Colonial Warriors.

(WHY do these trams get into so much trouble? The answer is unknown.)

As I stressed to the people of Washington, it is important to know that the Colonial Warriors were not animatronic -- they were played by ACTUAL HUMAN ACTORS. (The Cylons, by contrast, were indeed animatronic, which I guess is another way of saying they were played by ACTUAL INHUMAN ROBOTS).

BUT: what I did not discover until years later, as I was piecing together my strange memories of this attraction via internet, was that these actors NEVER SPOKE. Instead, their lines were pre-recorded years before, presumably by other, better actors, and played over a loudspeaker -- a weird kind of torture which makes the ride now seem much more scary.

RECENTLY I discovered some amazing behind the scenes videos of the ride, presumably shot by these very actors, including one in which you actually follow along behind a Colonial Warrior as he runs through the ride doing his weird space mime, gesturing his head as though he were speaking. See "Following a Hero" -- the video portion begins after a series of stills.

I AM ESPECIALLY FOND of the video of the Battle of Galactica break room called "Back Stage at Battle of Galactica." See if you can spot the barbell, the completely incongruous map on the wall, and the man dressed as a Colonial Warrior writing a letter home. A letter which presumably contains only the word "WHY?" written over and over and over.

AS AN accidental TV personality and wholly fraudulent "actor," I often enjoy looking at this video whenever my head gets too big (usually at 10AM, and then again at 4PM).

MANY THANKS INDEED to Dale Long of byyourcommand.net, which is pretty much your one stop shop for BATTLE OF GALACTICA photos and videos.

That is all.

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Bill Geerhart says:

Pamphlet review of 1948's "Behind the Lace Curtains of the YWCA" written by Joseph P. Kamp, an uncle of Jon Voight and a great uncle of Angelina Jolie.

Scroll all the way down to see the insane cover.

Paranoid Delusions of Angelina Jolie's Great Uncle
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Cool looking photos of the body scanners the TSA is using in airports. Wouldn't this one be a great radioactive extraterrestrial for a scary movie? TSA body scanner images

Chanel gun heel

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Seen above, the gun heel from the Chanel Cruise 2009 collection. Chanel Gun Heel (Thanks, Michael-Anne Rauback!)

Giant spider eats bird

A giant Golden Orb Weaver spider caught a chestnut-breasted mannikin bird in its web and made a leisurely lunch on the bird. The photo was snapped in a backyard in Cairns, Queensland, Australia. From the Cairns Post:
 Images Gallery 2008 10 23 117821 "Normally they prey on large insects, it's unusual to see one eating a bird," (said head spider keeper Joel Shakespeare at the Australian Reptile Park.)

Mr Shakepeare told ninemsn he had seen golden orb weaver spiders as big as a human hand but the northern species in tropical areas were known to grow larger...

"(The spider) wouldn`t eat the whole bird," he told ninemsn.

"It uses its venom to break down the bird for eating and what it leaves is a food parcel," he said.
Spider eats bird (Thanks, Jennifer Lum!)

Hit A Jew Day

Several students at Parkway West Middle School in suburban St. Louis are facing suspension for inventing "Hit A Jew Day," during which they smacked Jewish students.
District officials said Thursday they believe that fewer than 10 children of the district's 35 Jewish students were struck.

District spokesman Paul Tandy said that in most cases, the students were hit on the back of their shoulders but one student was slapped in the face.

It began with an unofficial "Spirit Week" among sixth-graders that started harmlessly enough with a "Hug a Friend Day." Then there was "High Five Day."

Soon, though, the days moved from friendly to silly. Next there was "Hit a Tall Person Day" and, finally, "Hit a Jew Day."
"Mo. students face punishment for 'Hit a Jew Day'" (Thanks, Gil Kaufman!)

Funny ad for Swedish Fish candy

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Nej. Ja.

(Via Lemonodor Auxiliary)

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William Smith, an online bookseller and blogger at Hang Fire Books, acquired a stack of old Sexology magazines. Sexology was one of publisher Hugo Gernsback's many titles (his most famous being Amazing Stories). Here's an illustration using obelisks to compare the difference between the "auto-erotic act" and the "normal marital act."

You can easily see--through the dramatic difference in "the height and girth of the obelisk[s]"--that the "gratification derived from the auto-erotic act is only about 60% as much as that of the normal marital act". But hey, I'm an obelisk half-full kind of guy.
Obelisks of Erotic Gratification from 1930s Gernsback magazine, Sexology

I hope they are wrong: United Panic

Over at NYT finance correspondent Floyd Norris' excellent blog, a snip from a terrifying report out today from The Levy Forecasting Center at Bard College. Norris says they've "Been among the most worried — and therefore, most accurate — forecasters over the past several years." Dear God, I hope they are wrong.
Most investors, businesses, and analysts, despite their deep pessimism about the consumer outlook, will be surprised by the length and severity of the consumer pullback.

The public is starting to discover the seriousness of the state and local fiscal position, but the magnitude and fallout of the developing nonfederal government crisis will prove shocking.

Many fear that the present financial mess is setting the stage for surging Treasury yields, and most will be surprised by how low yields will fall. . . .

House prices will probably fall another 20%. . . .

The emerging market sector of the global economy is facing more than a financial crisis; it is facing a depression, which unfortunately is likely to be uncontained and severe in many countries. . . .

Even if the recession does end before 2010, employment will continue to decline. It is likely to fall for another year or two as downsizing and restructuring persist. The unemployment rate is likely to reach 8.5% by the end of 2009 and will be near 10% before it reverses.

United Panic (Floyd Norris Blog, New York Times)
My friend Jim Munroe's just adapted his fantastic slideshow, "Time Management for Anarchists" into a free, Creative Commons-licensed comic:
Time Management for Anarchists, a comic offering productivity tips for creative malcontents, has just been released as a Creative Commons licenced free download.

In a timeshifted Toronto, political firebrand Emma Goldman is paying the rent as a graphic designer… just a few cubicles down from like-minded radical Mikhail Bakunin.

She’s been sneaking in her own projects at work.

He’s her reluctant manager.

The tension is mounting...

The Time Management For Anarchists comic (Thanks, Jim!)

See also: Time-management for anarchists from a productive anarcho-geek

Piglet Squid is Cute


Scientists at the Cabrillo Marine Aquarium found a cute deep-water squid that looks like a fat little cartoon piggie:

Piglet Squid, Helicocranchia pfefferi: This funny looking squid is about the size of a small avocado and can be found most commonly in the deepwater (greater than 100 m or 320 ft) of virtually all oceans. Its habit of filling up with water and the funny location of its siphone with a wild-looking 'tuft' of eight arms and two tentacles had prompted scientists to name it the piglet squid.
Piglet Squid (Science Blogs, thanks Emeka Okafor)
On the Freedom to Tinker blog, Timothy Lee explores the irrelevance of the economic notion of "free riding" when it comes to many kinds of online collaboration. As Lee notes, many thinkers on this subject have talked about how projects like Wikipedia "overcome" the free-rider anxiety (the idea that someone else will benefit from your labor without having to contribute to it), but that's not quite right: when someone else's enjoyment of your labor costs you nothing, and buys you fame, then you don't have a free-rider problem at all:
The second problem with the "free riding" frame is that it fails to appreciate that the sheer scale of the Internet changes the nature of collective action problems. With a traditional meatspace institution like a church, business or intramural sports league, it's essential that most participants "give back" in order for the collective effort to succeed. The concept of "free riding" emphasizes the fact that traditional offline institutions expect and require reciprocation from the majority of their members for their continued existence. A church in which only, say, one percent of members contributed financially wouldn't last long. Neither would an airline in which only one percent of the customers paid for their tickets.
The Trouble with "Free Riding"

Scott Carney, an investigative journalist and WIRED contributor based in Chennai, India, has an amazing story out in this month's issue about mob bosses in Bangalore who are in cahoots with the IT industry:
Since the beginning of India's IT boom Bangalore has been the darling of globalization pundits and and development dreamers. The gist, as Thomas Friedman articulates it, is that the world is flattening so that workers and companies can compete for opportunities from anywhere on the planet. Bangalore, of course, is the shiniest example of globalization's success. However, what has been occluded from the discussion is how the massive investments and capital flows into Bangalore have also contributed to the rise of a powerful and violent mafia. Bangalore's economy is growing much faster than its judicial, regulatory and enforcement systems. The gap has proved to be fertile ground for an unregulated, informal and often criminal systems to fill the space.

In this month's issue of WIRED magazine I wrote a story called "The Godfather of Bangalore" where I showed how underworld dons have taken control of many of the city's land dealings by providing an alternate judicial system to mediate land claims. There is no easy way to solve a land dispute in India. Inherited parcels are often contested by dozens of semi-legitimate claimants and court cases routinely take 15 years to come to a judgment. But the pace of land development is relentless, and companies and wealthy individuals don't want to wait for the wheels of justice to finish, they want immediate resolutions.
Link to post on Scott's blog with more background on the story, and read it in entirety here: The Godfather of Bangalore (Wired).

Yesterday on Boing Boing Gadgets

bat_shield_base.jpgYesterday on Boing Boing Gadget, it was review Thursday and we flushed our systems clear: Joel posted a thoughtful review of the Android G1 and horrible hair review of an iPod dock while Beschizza reviewed the self-moving chess set he always wanted as a youth.

Otherwise, Brownlee's glasses are disgusting, and Korens invent a system of radioactive hamster droppings to help save firefighter lives. A bedside table that breaks apart into bludgeoning weapons will make an excellent gift, although a scanning dictionary the size of an adult forearm would probably not.

The new MacBooks can indeed use both GPUs at once, and we looked at rumors that a new Apple device is being spotted in the search engine wild. Beschizza, a shut-in, dreamed of an electric sunset, while Brownlee's inner eight year old squealed for a DVD playing Darth Vader head.

There were also boxing robots, industrial Margarita makers and Joel imagining Opera on a Sybian.

And, as always, a stop-motion nightmare chicken laid an egg that hatched into a car.

Link

The New Scientist has the skinny on the latest salvo in the war on Darwin: a resurrection of Cartesian dualism, with the idea that the brain is a physical object, but the mind that inhabits it is made from some kind of ghostly jesusite-235 that conclusively proves the existence of the Invisible Sky Daddy in a white robe and beard:
Schwartz and Beauregard are part of a growing "non-material neuroscience" movement. They are attempting to resurrect Cartesian dualism - the idea that brain and mind are two fundamentally different kinds of things, material and immaterial - in the hope that it will make room in science both for supernatural forces and for a soul. The two have signed the "Scientific dissent from Darwinism" petition, spearheaded by the Seattle-based Discovery Institute, headquarters of the intelligent design movement. ID argues that biological life is too complex to have arisen through evolution.

In August, the Discovery Institute ran its 2008 Insider's Briefing on Intelligent Design, at which Schwartz and Michael Egnor, a neurosurgeon at Stony Brook University in New York, were invited to speak. When two of the five main speakers at an ID meeting are neuroscientists, something is up. Could the next battleground in the ID movement's war on science be the brain?

Well, the movement certainly seems to hope that the study of consciousness will turn out to be "Darwinism's grave", as Denyse O'Leary, co-author with Beauregard of The Spiritual Brain, put it. According to proponents of ID, the "hard problem" of consciousness - how our subjective experiences arise from the objective world of neurons - is the Achilles heel not just of Darwinism but of scientific materialism. This fits with the Discovery Institute's mission as outlined in its "wedge document", which seeks "nothing less than the overthrow of materialism and its cultural legacies", to replace the scientific world view with a Christian one.

Creationists declare war over the brain (Thanks, Bill!)
Becky Hogge of the Open Rights Group sez,
We’ve had about half a dozen returns for tonight’s “Piracy vs Obscurity” event at the Crypt on the Green in Clerkenwell, London, UK - the first date on Neil's UK tour and a special Open Rights Group benefit gig. If you’re a Neil Gaiman fan, and you’d like to attend, email info [AT] openrightsgroup [DOT] org and we’ll try and squeeze you in.

Tickets are £10 (or £5 for ORG supporters) payable in cash on the door. In return you’ll get to hear ORG's illustrious patron talk about piracy from the perspective of the creator, you’ll get to quiz him on his views and work, and you’ll even get the chance to win a copy of his new title The Graveyard Book.

Date: Today!
Time: 1900 for 1930 Place: The Crypt on the Green, St James Church, Clerkenwell, Clerkenwell Close, London EC1R 0EA, UK
Tax: £10 on the door, or £5 for ORG supporters (but NB email info [AT] openrightsgroup [DOT] org to be sure to get your name on the list!)

Come see Neil Gaiman talk in London tonight (Thanks, Becky!)
Duke University's Jennifer Jenkins sez,

Duke University Press has just released an expanded edition of “Bound By Law”, the comic book by three law profs about copyright, fair use, and documentary film. It includes a wonderful new Introduction by BoingBoing’s own Cory Doctorow and Foreword by Oscar-winning filmmaker Davis Guggenheim, and is freely available under a Creative Commons license.

From Cory’s Introduction: "This is a sensible book about a ridiculous subject. It’s an example of the principle it illustrates: that taking from the culture around us to make new things is what culture is all about, it's what culture is for. Culture is that which we use to communicate.

"The comic form makes this issue into something less abstract, more concrete, and the Duke Public Domain folks who produced this have not just written a treatise on copyright, they’ve produced a loving tribute to the form of comics.

"It’s a book whose time has come. Read it, share it. Get angry. Do something. Document your world."

Bound by Law?: Tales from the Public Domain, New Expanded Edition, Buy on Amazon

* Downloads: High-rez, Low-rez (Thanks, Jennifer!)

See also:
* Copyright comic is now on sale - "Understanding Comics" for copyright
* Comic book brilliantly explains copyright for documentary filmmakers

HOWTO win the nerd vote

Matt "Metafilter" Haughey's laid out a 10-point plan for winning the nerd vote that I heartily endorse -- this is a platform I'd stand up and salute if any politician had the guts to endorse it. The points are: Broadband everywhere, universal healthcare, no federal tax on Internet purchases, renewed commitment to education, renewed commitment to science, real changes to transportation, early voting by mail, revamping copyright, a better job from the patent office, and open government.
1. Broadband Everywhere. I want crazy South Korea/Japan style broadband I've heard about for years: 100Mbps (upload and download) fiber connections for less than $50/month with unlimited bandwidth and the ability to run your own servers. I know the US is a big spread out country and it makes this stuff somewhat difficult/costly, but it's an ambitious goal with a ton of payoff. We don't have manufacturing jobs in the US anymore: we don't make things, we don't build things, we don't sew things here, but we do have lots of ideas and inventions.

The economy of the future in the US is going to be intertwined with the internet and if every man, woman, and child in America has all the internet access they could ever need and could quickly program, build, and deploy their own stuff on their own mega-fast lines, we'd have a million and one programmers and designers and crafters and more contributing to a new vibrant future economy. If fiber everywhere is too much, at least get 3G coverage in more places.

How to get my nerd vote
T-Mobile's new Google Android phone, the G1, is not as open as you'd hope -- all the good hardware is sandboxed off from the development environment and requires a signature to run. But hackers are already working to crack open the firmware. From the #android channel on Freenode:
I hacked my camera's firmware manually by using an exploit to cause it to execute arbitrary code - and then blinking out the entire firmware in 0's and 1's on the autofocus LED - read in by a photo transistor attached to a sound cable plugged into my microphone port - and then put back into 0's and 1's...
Then disassembled the ARM9 code in it and worked on porting CHDK to it...
I'm pretty sure having a whole OS at my disposal should make this a lot easier
The T-Mobile G1 — nice phone, but not totally open
Here's a lovely Instructable from Scoochmaroo, explaining how to make an edible (well, more edible) brain out of a watermelon -- suitable for vegan zombies.

# Slice off bottom of watermelon so it won't roll around.
# Peel green skin off of the watermelon.
# Score brainy folds in white flesh.
# With a sharp paring knife, carve channels out of melon to resemble cortical folds.
Melon Brains (via Make)

Iain sez, "Icelanders hit back at the freezing of assets under terror legislation by the UK Government. Postcards of cute Icelanders in cuter knitwear." Icelanders Are Not Terrorists (Thanks, Iain!)

Filmmaker Ralph Leighton says, "This was the highlight of my recent trip to Vladivostok, Russia, where the film GENGHIS BLUES won the Governor's Prize at the Pacific Meridian Film Festival. It features Tuvan throat-singer ONDAR and the voice of [Nobel laureate and physicist] Richard Feynman. I hope you enjoy it." Back TUVA Future: Ondar in Vladivostok. If you're wondering what the hell Tuva has to do with Feynman, check this out. (Thanks, George Dyson!)

Kembra Pfahler: Sit-Ins

200810231755

Richard Metzger says:

From October 8 to November 1, New York's fab Deitch Projects art gallery host my beloved friend Kembra Pfahler's latest show of "butt prints"! The exhibit coincides with the Deitch-published artist monograph "Beautalism" which documents Pfahler's recent work.
Sit-Ins at Deitch Projects

NSA parody-logo shirts from EFF!


Hugh from the Electronic Frontier Foundation sez, "By popular demand, we have made our NSA logo parody available on a t-shirt! It's only available with a membership donation of $65 or more -- money that will be put to work in the fight against illegal spying." EFF's New NSA Spying Shirts (Thanks, Hugh!)
Typically, to dial out from an office line you hit 9 first. BB's saint of author services at Federated Media, Mugs Buckley, tells me that's changing for a very interesting reason. Mugs writes:
FM used an 8 and the other office I'm in just changed their system to a 7 due to the San Mateo police department getting all upset (and I don't blame them) about how many false calls there are to their system.
If you've heard similar stories, please share them in the comments!
Fonzhoward Ron Howard, Andy Grffith, and Henry Winkler revived some old characters in a pro-Obama "call to action." It's funny, cute, sentimental, and incredibly awkward and horrifying all at once.
Ron Howard's Call To Action (Thanks, Joel Johnson!)

Oldest toy in Britain

 News Bigphotos Images 081021-Stonehenge-Toy Big
The carved animal figure above may be the oldest child's toy in Britain. Archaeologists from the University of Bristol found it last month near Stonhehnge and think it's at least 2,000 years old. They dug it out of a young child's grave. There is some debate about whether the toy is a pig or hedgehog.
The Bronze Age figurine was likely made as a toy or in memory of the baby being stillborn or dying in infancy, archaeologist (Joshua Pollard) said...

Evidence of toys during this period in British history is "extremely scant," Pollard said.

"In fact, it's very rare to find any kind of representational art in British prehistory—almost to the extent where you get the impression there's a bit of a taboo on making images of animals or people."
"Britain's Oldest Toy Found Buried With Stonehenge Baby?"
Joel Johnson spent several days living with the T-Mobile G1, the first Google Android phone. His review, posted to BB Gadgets, is a deep critique of the product but it also contains a thoughtful meditation on gadget reviews in general. From his post:
 Gimages G1-Hpp Products are not simply loved or hated, but appreciated over time on a scale which terminates with perfection at one extreme, failure to operate at the other. That scale can be broken down in any number of metrics, all of which are useless: what matters to the owner of a product is not where a reviewer, a single sample, has chosen to mark his opinion at an arbitrary point in time on the scale, but in what direction that point is heading. (And to a lesser and murkier degree, for how long that trend will continue.)

What's lost in the review — the direction of love — is critical. Like romantic love, a slide towards increasing love helps us overlook flaws, remember only the best aspects of our products' features, and gives the relationship between a product and its owner time to flourish and grow. Hidden delights will show themselves after a time, reinforcing the relationship, even as unaddressed incompatibilities might, after a measure, begin to tilt affection towards declination.
"A few days with the T-Mobile G1, the first Google Android phone"

Virtual "murderer" jailed

In more virtual crime news, a Tokyo woman was jailed for "murdering" her ex-husband. Well, kinda. The 43-year-old logged in to the man's Maple Story account and killed his avatar. From the AP:
She has not yet been formally charged. If convicted, she could face up to five years in prison or a fine up to $5,000...

When bad deeds lead to criminal charges, prosecutors have found a real-world activity to cite — as in this case, in which the woman was charged with inappropriate computer access.
Woman jailed after 'killing' virtual husband

Previously on BB:
Teens convicted of virtual theft

Teens convicted of virtual theft

Two Danish Dutch teenagers were convicted of virtually roughing up a classmate in the multiplayer online game RuneScape and stealing some virtual goods from him. From the Associated Press:
"These virtual goods are goods (under Dutch law), so this is theft," the court said on Tuesday in a summary of its ruling...

The 15-year-old was sentenced to 200 hours service, and the 14-year-old to 160 hours.
"Teens convicted of virtual theft"

Bicycle bell camera mount

 Diy Bicycam Images Pict3331  Diy Bicycam Images 4
Jens Almström realized that the screw inside his bicycle bell was the same size as the screw on his tripod. So now his bike bell is easily converted into a camera mount! He posted a simple HOWTO about it. Bicycam (Thanks, Jess Hemerly!)
A couple weeks ago, my colleagues at Institute for the Future launched Superstruct, an alternate reality game set in the year 2019. In the game world, 2019 is a pretty intense time to be a human. Our species could be wiped out in just 23 years by a variety of superthreats, like disease, food shortages, environmental devastation, and power struggles (er, unbelievable as that may sound). Superstruct is an opportunity to imagine how we might solve global problems, if we can solve them. The game will be played for another month and you can join any time. From the Superstruct FAQ:
Superstrucutututut Q: What does "superstruct" mean?
Su`per`struct´ v. t. 1.To build over or upon another structure; to erect upon a foundation. Superstructing is what humans do. We build new structures on old structures. We build media on top of language and communication networks. We build communities on top of family structures. We build corporations on top of platforms for manufacturing, marketing, and distribution. Superstructing has allowed us to survive in the past and it will help us survive the super-threats...

Q: How do I play Superstruct?
A: Superstruct is played on forums, blogs, videos, wikis, and other familiar online spaces. We show you the world as it might look in 2019. You show us what it's like to live there. Bring what you know and who you know, and we'll all figure out how to make 2019 a world we want to live in.
Superstruct
week of 10/19/2008

Recent Comments

  • "The real issue is that the BBC decided to invite Griffin on to the programme, but was under no obligation to do so. Nobody is talking about censorship or banning of political groups. There are a lot of tiny groups floating round, who hold mad ideas and might even get votes at elections, the BBC doesn't invite them on to their flagship entertainment programmes. It made an exception for an openly racist group, whose leaders are regularly recorded expressing agreement with Hitler and talking about hiding thei..."
  • "Sometimes I'll dream in third person and my dreams are always in color. I had a third person dream like that last night. The new thing for me is dreams heavily influenced by Second Life. I've had dreams with people flying around in the background like avatars and with having to wait for objects to rez. I need to spend more time outside, apparently...."
  • "Even beforehand, they're pretty creepy, but afterwards, damn. It's the mascara eyelashes that freak me out. Kids in makeup give me the heebie jeebies. Then again, I'm not that keen on it in grownups either...."
  • "MattF: even so, check out the Cree LR6 or LR4 (depending on the size of your fixtured) for a quality LED bulb that fits in a regular light bulb socket...."
  • "Much of the UK political community is today saying that they're glad he was finally dragged out in public so that everybody can see what he's really about. While commentators have previously been eager to label Griffin as a "racist" or "nazi", few people had actually heard his views before now. Now there are no secrets and no claims of 'suppressed truth', just a simple set of ideas that most people disagree with. The likely result of this is for him to gather support from the tiny minority of UK citizens wh..."
  • "Oh yes, boo-hoo, a poor startup like Apple can't break into the patent-encumbered field dominated by giants like Nokia, Motorola, Nortel, Siemens, HTC, and, uh, half a gazillion chinese, taiwanese, etc. handset manufacturers (hey, even Peek and Amazon are using the GSM or CDMA technologies - and thus are probably paying the licensing fees). AFAIR, the ITU rules specifically state that licensing has to be "fair and non-discriminatory", so Nokia, Qualcomm, etc. can't ask Apply any more (or less) than anyone..."
  • "I looked over the Yes Men page and it looks nothing like a parody to me. It looks like they honestly want to make people think the CoC made the website. There's no mocking, no humor, just serious-looking text on an authentic-looking website. If I do an impression of a famous person as political commentary, and I totally nail it - you know, I copy their voice and affect so perfectly it really seems like it could be them...am I then guilty of a crime? Is doing a good impression a crime, whereas doing a bad ..."
  • "I'm fine with Nick Griffin and the BNP getting the Two-Minute Hate ... so long as two minutes in the spotlight is all he gets. After that, let's move on and leave him and his little band of retro-blackshirts to the oblivion they so richly deserve...."
  • "as i recall, the hemp seeds aren't ground. check out the S&B brand of shichimi togarashi. also, the chow.com recipe is a little wonky... there should be chinese pepper/sansho in shichimi...."
  • "The other big issue with fluorescent light bulbs though is that they use mercury. Even ignoring the environmental impact of that, we break bulbs often enough that I have stopped using compact fluorescent bulbs entirely, and only use the tubes in covered light fixtures. I also wonder what percentage of CFL users use proper disposal methods for the bulbs...."