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Above are some are the hacked Maker's Notebook we have on display at Maker Faire Austin. The top one has a computer keyboard membrane on the cover and uses the membrane's ribbon connector as a latch closure. The magnetic catch and metal strip can be seen in the second image. The third image is Marc de Vinck's Notebook with an embedded cellphone screen, displaying a library of all of the Maker's Notebook stickers (for when you can't decide WHICH sticker you want on your cover). Can you figure out which is the virtual sticker? The last one is the steampunk'd Maker's Notebook, de rigueur for airship captain's everywhere. (Pardon the crude phonecam pics.)
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Austin Children's Museum is hosting some great kid activities at Maker Faire. You can make kites, penny parachutes, experiment with chemistry, and see local kids show off their inventions and creations. They'll be blogging from Maker Faire over the weekend; check it out!
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From now until the awesomeness that is Maker Faire Austin, I'll be highlighting projects that you can find at Travis County Fairgrounds on 10/18-19. Tickets here; see you there!

You won't just be doing this with your schedule to see all the projects this weekend, but also with homemade juggling clubs! From juggler.org :
Learn how to make three great juggling clubs for less than eight bucks. Then make three balls for mere pennies! There will be free juggling lessons and demonstrations throughout the day.We will also be excited to debut the results of our experiments with EL wire to make cheap glow props!
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This DIY project is perfect for making it look like a bottomless pit in at your Halloween party or Yard Haunted House. Check out what the author says below:
During the day you can't see into it as it has to be darker outside the drum than inside. I drilled a 3" hole in the side of the drum and strapped a 25 watt red light bulb to the side. I used strapping tape to hold the light on strictly because I was too lazy to look for another way to do it in a hurry. At night the red light lit it up just enough that folks were attracted over to that side of the yard to see what the eerie red glow coming out of the ground was.
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Nick writes about what a huge success the first MAKE: Princeton meeting was:
I am happy to announce that the first meeting of MAKE:Princeton was an incredible success! Perhaps 10 people showed up from as far away as Jackson, Ewing and New Brunswick, New Jersey, and even Yardley, PA!. Several people brought projects for show and tell. Bill showed us his HF Start for his Tig Welder. He effectively turned a $200 welder into a $1000 welder. Jon showed us his new USB RFID reader. He toyed around with all sorts of ideas, even crazy user interfaces build around RFID dice. I showed off my alarm clock, and Ian was kind enough to show us the diy Jukebox and arcade game that he built with his brother. Each of these has an embedded computer and incredible craftsmanship. He said he engineered the arcade game so it could be disassembled and transported in a car.
The next meeting will be in two weeks. Same bat time, same bat channel.
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I love Tiki Farm mugs in general, but this is the very best set I've ever seen. Wow!
Rigor Marty and the Dirt Nappers!
(Thanks, Vern!)
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Butterflies, wah-wah pedals, and one-eyed yeti, ahoy! The Boing Boing tv crew is proud to return to the work of one of our favorite multi-media savants, Bill Barminski of Walter Robot Studios. The filmmaker, composer, illustrator and animator shares this new video work, a hypnotic flight of fancy for his music project, the Subatomic Nixons. Enjoy the "Hazy Day," and happy weekend, everyone. Special thanks to Barminski and Christopher Louie, and all of the Walter Robot team. Here are previous BBtv episodes featuring their work.
Link to Boing Boing tv blog post with instructions on how to subscribe to the BBtv daily video podcast. Direct MP4 Link.
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In these tough times I think Halloween is going to be even bigger. Why? Because so much of Halloween fun is DIY magic. From the pumpkin carving to making your trash can into a monster.
So why not earn some extra cash for your work? Check out the User Generated Contest that FEARnet is running around haunting your house. The prize is 25,000 dollars and an appearance on Good Morning America.
Of course don't forget about the mother of all DIY Halloween contests our own! We want to see what delightfully frightful items you've made and we have dozens of awesome prizes to give away! You can enter an Instructable, photos, or video, just make it amazing and it will be eligible to win in one of our six categories: Hack-o-Lantern, Costume, Gadgets and Gizmos, Decorations, Food, and Green, or our Photo and Video categories!
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Dr. Matthew Gilbert, a 28-year-old medical resident, was among participants in the University of Illinois study this past spring. Since then, he said, he has revived real patients by keeping the song in his head while doing CPR."Stayin' Alive" has near-perfect rhythm to help jump-start heart
Gilbert said he was surprised the song worked as well as it did.
"I was a little worried because I've been told that I have a complete lack of rhythm," he said. Also, Gilbert said he's not really a disco fan.
He does happen to like a certain Queen song with a similar beat.
"I heard a rumor that 'Another One Bites the Dust' works also, but it didn't seem quite as appropriate," Gilbert said.
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Meat After Meat JoyMeat After Meat Joy brings together the work of contemporary artists who use meat in their work... in order to investigate the paradoxical relationship meat has to the body. Meat combines flesh, skin, muscle, organs, blood - each with its own relationship to the body, yet meat's only reference to the body is as a once-upon-a-time living biological thing. By putting these artists together, the exhibition seeks to investigate the uncanny effect meat as a medium is for artist and viewer. This is not a show about meat as spectacle but about meat as signification, precisely because meat does not signify (a body) but its very annihilation...
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Renee Chambers, Cholla's owner and assistant, says his international acclaim proves his artistic talents.Horse takes up painting, has works exhibited
"Yes, it's a novelty that a horse can paint," she said. "But it's not about novelty anymore. It's about his validation as an artist."
Cholla's painting career began by accident, Chambers said. He'd follow her around when she'd paint the corral each year, and one day her husband quipped, "You should get that horse to paint the fence."
Chambers instead tacked a piece of paper to a railing, bought some watercolors, mixed them up, and handed a brush to Cholla, who gripped it in his teeth and stroked the paper.
"He's been painting ever since," she said.
Make a gory Hollywood-style bloody knife wound with spine tingling results!
Thanks go to Zack Stern for the original article in Make: Halloween.
To download Blood Spurting Knife Wound MP4 click here or subscribe in iTunes.
Pick up your copy of the Make Special Edition: Halloween at the Maker Shed.
Over 40 projects for the holiday that's made for makers. From the craftiest costumes to amazing animated props and the latest in computer-controlled haunted house effects.

Mckeephoto put together an Instructable for attaching these skeletons to your house - I'd love to see them animated, or a whole swarm of them!
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Looks like there's a good time to be had for Madison, Wisconsin area benders this Halloween. [via GetLoFi]
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Try out this gory, spine tingling effect that is so realistic it will make people scream!
Thanks go to Zack Stern for the original article in Make: Halloween
View the PDF
Pick up your copy of the Make Special Edition: Halloween at the Maker Shed.
Over 40 projects for the holiday that's made for makers. From the craftiest costumes to amazing animated props and the latest in computer-controlled haunted house effects.
From now until the awesomeness that is Maker Faire Austin, I'll be highlighting projects that you can find at Travis County Fairgrounds on 10/18-19. Tickets here; see you there!

NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Program will be showcasing their Yahoo photo-uploading geo-tagging bikes and talking shop about their other projects at Maker Faire Austin. Check out their other work here, and be sure to come see them (plus hundreds of other Makers) starting tomorrow in Austin!
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From the MAKE Flickr photo pool
Flickr member Unity Gain writes -
A ridiculously gut crushing distortion circuit packed into a pleasantly aromatic oregano spice jar. The best smelling distortion found anywhere.This would likely sound great with a nice Basil chorus after it - Oregano Distortion Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Green | Digg this!
Throw a whole banana into your diaper bag before heading out the door. When it's time to eat, mash up the banana before peeling it - just squishing it a bit with your fingers does the trick. Then, peel open a small hole at the end (not the end with the longer stem). Squeeze the mashed banana into the baby's mouth like you're icing a cake. Voila - no spoon necessary, and almost no mess.How to turn a whole banana into a no-mess baby meal (no spoon required)
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This little board is called "Geta" and is a minimal Arduino-based board that uses an oscillator built in the shape of a wooden sandal.
Sandal via Arduino Blog

From the MAKE Flickr photo pool
Dan re-envisioned a guitar as a very original project enclosure -
This is my very first electric guitar which was recently re-born to be a weird sound generator (www.musicfromouterspace.com) with a hand-made motherboard pick guard. Also affectionately known as the Fender Bender.Wow - well done and a very bold move - nice addition of those pushbutton switches to the fretboard. The Fender Bender #1 Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Music | Digg this!
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These trash bin conversions by british artist Oliver Bishop-Young range in everything from a swimming pool, to ping pong table, to fake lawn, to talk show set, to instant garden. Check out the link for pictures of all of these inventive ways to turn the eyesore in your neighborhood into a work of art.
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The Stribe is a really cool open source music controller. It takes some serious soldering skills to make one, but the end results are fantastic. Check it out at Maker Faire in Austin.
Eight touch-sensitive strips are flanked by dual columns of LEDs, providing subtle fingertip control coupled with illuminated feedback. The Stribe's firmware communicates via USB with music programs such as Max/MSP and Reaktor.
More about The Stribe
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Processing is a great open source application for artists and experimenters. This Minority Report style application was created in 20 minutes! Amazing! Check out the link to download the source code. [Thanks Guru]
Today I read about touchless an opensource sdk microsoft has released. it enables you to track objects using a simple webcam to create apps similar to a multitouch display.Then I spent about 20 minutes coding a processing sketch that does roughly the same :-)
As you can see in the screenshot I cant affort the same cool toys the microsoft coder has in the demo video, so I had to use some post-its instead
Read more about "Touchless" Multitouch in Processing
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Today on Boing Boing Gadgets, we looked at the T-Mobile Android G1's "not evil" killswitch and a tiny little Korean monitor for corralling your contact lists.
Joel Johnson — Obama supporter — said "so what?" to a report that Verizon and AT&T provided temporary cellular towards to McCain's ranch, and Brownlee looked at a gorgeous refreshof a 1960's Italian stereo
Joel loved a 64K intro by a Hungarian demoscene group, puttered a 3D printed car around his desk while making puttering noises with his mouth, put a paper plate made out of leaves through the dish washer and the old Lemonaid Loaders his grandfather used to make.
Brownlee liked a Space Invaders alarm clock, an R2D2 backpack and a suicidal light night.
The newest 3D webcams will stab porn into your eyes, Studio Ghibli is doing a DS game, Joel needs advice on building a gaming PC for $1k and Rob got some hands-on time with Sony's hot new all-in-one desktop.
Oh, and according to Apple France, the new MacBooks are perfect shit.
Link
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This is a really cool project by Eric Lundquist. He will be displaying his Video Head at Maker Faire in Austin. I can't wait to see it in person.
The Video Head Project was inspired by the amazing art project called Drum Head by Murat Konar. In a attempt to take it to the next level, the Video Head will have multiple mouth and eye expressions in order to display a wider range of emotions and interactions. The foam head gives the image an eerie lifelike 3-d appearance.
More about the Video Head
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Once again, the music industry overestimated the level of control they should be allowed to maintain over their copyrighted works. Just as when Sony invaded its consumers’ privacy by embedding software in CDs and when the five largest music distribution companies illegally corroborated to fix the price of CDs, the music industry has again violated the law. The United States District Court for the Central District of California concluded, via summary judgment, that the purported EULA included by UMG did not create a “license,” nor does it allow UMG to retain any control over the promotional CD. UMG gave away these CDs, and those who receive them are free to dispose of them as they see fit. Therefore, the court found, as the legal owner of the CDs in question, Mr. Augusto and Roast Beast Music broke no laws in selling these recordings, and may continue to do so.“Damn The Man!” The Ability To Sell Second-Hand CDs (Thanks, Steve!)At least we can still sell our old CDs… Right?
It depends. While Mr. Augusto enjoys the right to sell his legally owned CDs, questions arise in a number of states as to who can purchase them. The music industry, it seems, is foregoing lawsuits in favor of promoting preventative legislation. Recent legislation in Florida, Utah, Wisconsin, and Rhode Island has made it more difficult to sell used CDs in those states than it is to get a driver’s license. In Florida, for example, anyone attempting to sell used CDs to a retailer must present identification and be fingerprinted, and any retailer looking to sell those same CDs must apply for a permit and submit a $10,000 bond with the Department of Agriculture and Human Services. Thankfully, those restrictions do not apply to online or person-to-person sales.
Remember when Congress -- including both presidential candidates -- voted to give the phone companies immunity from prosecution, even though they had clearly broken the law, on the grounds that the president had asked them to? (If the president asked you to shoot someone, would Congress let you off the hook, too?)
Well now EFF is suing to have the immunity -- the unconstitutional immunity -- overturned. Go EFF!
"The immunity law puts the fox in charge of the hen house, letting the Attorney General decide whether or not telecoms like AT&T can be sued for participating in the government's illegal warrantless surveillance," said EFF Senior Staff Attorney Kevin Bankston. "In our constitutional system, it is the judiciary's role as a co-equal branch of government to determine the scope of the surveillance and rule on whether it is legal, not the executive's. The Attorney General should not be allowed to unconstitutionally play judge and jury in these cases, which affect the privacy of millions of Americans."EFF Challenges Constitutionality of Telecom Immunity in Federal Court, Donate to EFFIn the public version of his certification to the court, Attorney General Mukasey asserted that the government had no "content-dragnet" program that searched for keywords in the body of communications. However, the government did not deny the dragnet acquisition of the content of communications. In support of its opposition, EFF provided the court with a summary of thousands of pages of documents demonstrating the broad dragnet surveillance of millions of innocent Americans' communications. Eight volumes of exhibits accompanied the detailed summary, including eyewitness accounts and testimony under oath.
"We have overwhelming record evidence that the domestic spying program is operating far outside the bounds of the law," said EFF Senior Staff Attorney Kurt Opsahl. "Intelligence agencies, telecoms, and the Administration want to sweep this case under the rug, but the Constitution won't permit it."
Starting in 1942, Jack Williamson wrote a series of stories about tough space miners who go after antimatter asteroids. There's the hope of unlimited energy, but the danger that any touch unleashes nuclear hell.Antimatter’s science fiction debut (Thanks, Bill!)In the latest issue of Symmetry, a magazine about particle physics, I've traced the chain of scientific developments in the 1930s and 1940s that inspired Williamson to write his "Seetee" tales-- if not the first, certainly the most influential stories to explore the physics of "contraterrene" (CT) matter.
Fermilab, where I work, manufactures antiprotons in quantity, so I enjoyed looking backwards at the ancestors of our business, tracking down the long-ago crossover where an abstruse possibility in nuclear physics led to speculation that flowed from astronomy to meteor science to SF.
Best of all, we obtained an image of Jack Williamson's carbon copy of "Collision Orbit." In their regular "Logbook" feature, the editors treated the manuscript with the reverence due a historic lab notebook, letter, or graph.
The Seetee stories originated in a weathered shack back of the family home on the Williamson ranch, which Jack built himself in 1934 so he could write in seclusion. This shack is still the object of occasional pilgrimages by 21st-century science fiction writers. See Scott Edelman's tour.
( Symmetry describes itself as "a magazine about particle physics and its connections to other aspects of life and science, from interdisciplinary collaborations to policy to culture.")
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"All of our undergraduates need to be conversant with new media. And none of our students, no matter what their major, should be leaving Newhouse without having a basic understanding of the fundamentals of new media and how to tell stories on multiple platforms."Hopefully, this lack of a specific major doesn't make people think that the school is ignoring new media, but that the school recognizes that new media isn't a silo, but influences things across the board.

Got a little felt and a safety pin? Mix 'em with a turtle neck you've got a halloween costume. Star Trek Comm Badges by user Crafty Intentions in the CRAFT Flickr pool.
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I took this photo of two pumpkins weighing around 700 lbs each outside the hardware store in Sebastopol, Calif.
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RiP: A remix manifesto (Thanks, Robbo!)
In RiP: A remix manifesto, Web activist and filmmaker Brett Gaylor explores issues of copyright in the information age, mashing up the media landscape of the 20th century and shattering the wall between users and producers.The film’s central protagonist is Girl Talk, a mash-up musician topping the charts with his sample-based songs. But is Girl Talk a paragon of people power or the Pied Piper of piracy? Creative Commons founder, Lawrence Lessig, Brazil's Minister of Culture Gilberto Gil and pop culture critic Cory Doctorow are also along for the ride.
Demolishing Aquarena (Thanks, Jeff!)
San Marcos, Texas' Aquarena Center, formerly a hilarious tourist trap called Aquarena Springs, will be bulldozed, with the land being restored to turn-of-the-previous-century condition.Aquarena was the home of the infamous Ralph the Swimming Pig, and his keeper Glurpo, a one-time "nightmarish aquatic clown" (http://www.boingboing.net/2005/01/20/nightmarish-aquatic-.html) turned "underwater witch doctor." There were also "aquamaids" who picnicked & performed ballet underwater, diving ducks, and a sadistic swan named Rufus.
Glass-bottomed boats will continue to ply the lake, described as "home to eight federally listed endangered species. ... one of the oldest continually inhabited sites in North America, and the second largest artesian spring in the western United States."
(Full disclosure - I worked in the underwater show for a couple of seasons in the early 70s. I WAS Glurpo, (in his witch doctor persona) as well as Bubblio, Scrubblio and "Announcer" and I knew Ralph personally!)

If you're doing wearables, I'd suggest transitioning over to the LilyPad Arduino sooner rather than later, but If you want the full Diecimilla board integrated into your project for one reason or another (ease of removability, street cred, etc.), Instructables user Pulsea has got a solution for you. She details how to sew male headers right to the fabric to make a "shield" for connecting fabric-embedded components right to the full Arduino board.
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He said: “When astronauts were de-suiting and taking off helmets, they all reported quite particular odours.Space smells of steak, say Nasa (Thanks, Marilyn!)“We have already produced the smell of fried steak, but hot metal is more difficult.
“We think it’s a high energy vibration in the molecule and that’s what we’re trying to add to it now.”
The Republican Party and the McCain campaign are saying some really awful things about Barack Obama in robo-calls in battleground states. It's strange and remarkably honest of them to self-identify, given that everything else they say is a lie. They even provide their phone number.
It's amazing that Sarah Palin, would-be VP to a 72-year-old cancer survivor asks Who Barack Obama Really Is? and yet we know almost nothing about her. More than amazing, isn't it imprudent?
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