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The state that she governs has no income or sales tax. Instead, it imposes huge levies on the oil companies that lease its oil fields. The proceeds finance the government’s activities and enable it to issue a four-figure annual check to every man, woman, and child in the state. One of the reasons Palin has been a popular governor is that she added an extra twelve hundred dollars to this year’s check, bringing the per-person total to $3,269. A few weeks before she was nominated for Vice-President, she told a visiting journalist—Philip Gourevitch, of this magazine—that “we’re set up, unlike other states in the union, where it’s collectively Alaskans own the resources. So we share in the wealth when the development of these resources occurs.” Perhaps there is some meaningful distinction between spreading the wealth and sharing it (“collectively,” no less), but finding it would require the analytic skills of Karl the Marxist.Like, Socialism
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It must be a seriously contentious election if even the pumpkins are becoming politically charged. Jonah shared some political pumpkins with you last week , and here are a few more:
Note: neither I nor Make Magazine have an opinion on whether McCain or Obama are actually Living Dead. I simply like the pumpkin design...
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Transcript snip:
Palin: Obama...Barack Obama has an ideological commitment to higher taxes. The lessons I believe we have taught our kids would start to erode. Those lessons about work ethic, hard work being rewarded and productivity being rewarded...From Wonkette, via Daily Kos. (Thanks, Richard Metzger).Female yelling off-camera, in audience:
And he's a ni***r!Palin: And...and......lessons about, um, the virtues of freedom and independence while being generous and compassionate with others.
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Cool painting tools, from the Lee Valley Tools Catalog, spotted on Dinosaurs and Robots. The pyramids are for raising up objects that you're painting.
Handy Painting Tools from Lee Valley
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Today at Boing Boing Gadgets, we worshipped the Pantone Rubik's cube and welcomed guest reviewer Alan Graham of Treehugger, who took a look at a new home music system from Sonos.
John found a rainbow keyboard, a review of Guitar Hero: World Tour, and the rumored motherboard for the rumored Mac Mini II. He thought the Gameboy theme for iPhone was fantastic, and 3-inch figurine speakers, too.
He liked liquid bookmarks, saw an icky transparent mouse with an insect in it, depressurized his head with the Ear Pressure Equalizer, and pronounced the final death for VCR.
Rob offered more on Lutec's inelegant perpetual motion machine, listened to unpleasant feedback music, and liked the look of UltraPin virtual pinball. He didn't think much of Blu-ray firmware upgrade nonsense or the stylings of Dell's new Optiplexes. Nor did he drop his cellphone down the toilet and get his arm stuck trying to fish it out.
Joel had an exclusive on Windows 7 screenshots that lasted about 40 seconds. Finally, there was a sinister science poster and the footage rotoscoped for Jordan Mechner's original Prince of Persia.
Modd3d has created a MIDI driven Halloween centerpiece of awesomeness -
I ripped the brains out of one of those cheap Gemmy skulls with the moving mouth and glowy eyes and installed a Midify board. It was a fairly easy project and I now have full control over the mouth and eyes. Now I just have to work on its musical taste.Personally, I think the skull's musical selection is spot-on. [via Synthtopia]
More:
Add MIDI to your TV dinner
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More good ideas for ways to use/bend/repurpose the atari punk console circuit -
Remade a Atari Punk Console a friend of mine gave me and put it into an old toy keyboard that I accidentally broke during a circuit bending frenzy this summer.Especially good if you have some leftovers from a "circuit bending frenzy". Keyboards certainly don't have to be 'in-tune' to be fun!
More:
Atari Punk Console schematics
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One of my favorite things about Maker Faire is watching people make things. There are so many things to see and so many distractions - it's really cool to slow down and watch folks really focusing on the thing they're doing. Here's a little round-up of makers, both kids and grownups, making masks, metal-working, playing with LEGO, running virtual mazes, playing pong - lots more!


Over at the MightyOhm, Jeff has been working on building a streaming WiFi radio system (built around a Asus WL-520GU router):
I have been wanting to build a streaming radio for some time. I frequently work in my garage, where I occasionally use my Macbook to play music through a small amplifier and bookshelf speakers. The problem is that my laptop is not always set up in the garage, and greasy fingers are not a good thing to have around a white laptop, period. I could simply buy an internet radio, but I couldn't stomach the $150-$300 price tag on most players for such a luxury.So I decided to build one instead.
I started the design process by drafting an outline of desired features, and then breaking them down into wants and needs, while trying to keep the project scope under control.
Here's Part 1 of the project.
And Part 2.
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A lot of folks who weren't in the Austin, TX area last week for Maker Faire Austin 2008 wanted some of the deals we had at the Maker Shed Store, so - for the rest of the week we're going to have a post each day with some of the specials. Here are 5 of the most popular products from the store along with some discounts!
Enter in MAKER to get 10% off any of these kits (or anything in the Maker Shed right now) if you spend more than $80 enter in FAIRE after and get free shipping on orders over $80.00 (Post discount of course), either of these codes will work independently from another as well as together.

DIY Electronics kit. Harness the power of the electron! Create games, toys, and contraptions with these fundamental components. Follow the easy instructions to make a light detector, LED flasher, noisemaker and more! Once you master the basics, you'll be ready to create your own! Everything you need to get started is right in the box, including switches, buttons, diodes, capacitors. transistors and regulators. Learn the amazing concepts of resistance, capacitance, voltage and current with the step-by-step project manual. Soon, you will be the electronics wizard! Great introduction to electronics for all ages.

Animated Ghost kit. Grab this cool kit for Halloween. Sound activated, the ghost flashes his little red LED eyes, vibrates and makes scary sounds!
Easy and fun to build. Hack it!

MintyBoost 2.0 kit. Build your own MintyBoost: a small & simple (but very powerful and very MAKE-like) USB charger for your iPod (or other mp3 player), camera, cell phone, and any other gadget you can plug into a USB port to charge.

Diet Coke and Mentos kit. Recreate the Internet sensation in your own backyard! Fresh from their performance at the 2008 Maker Faires, the guys at EepyBird have hand crafted replica PVC nozzles just like the ones they use themselves. Each kit contains a variety of nozzle cuts to give you the coolest, highest shooting geysers. We'll even throw in a pack of Mentos to get you started (Diet Coke not included). Check out EepyBird videos here. Thanks again for another great show guys!

Arduino Starter kit. Arduino is a tool for making computers that can sense and control more of the physical world than your desktop computer. It's an open-source physical computing platform based on a simple microcontroller board, and a development environment for writing software for the board. Arduino is open source! We've put together our own Arduino Starter Kit, tossed in our bestselling Making Things Talk book, wrapped it up in some cool packaging so you can get started quickly without having to do a lot of shopping first.
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Remember - enter in MAKER to get 10% off any of these kits, if you spend more than $80 enter in FAIRE after and get free shipping on orders over $80.00 (Post discount of course), either of these codes will work independently from another as well as together.
If these kits don't float your boat stop back on Weds around the same time for more!




For this weekend's Steam Powered: The California Steampunk Convention, the band Abney Park and Airship Ventures have teamed up to offer dirigible rides to conference-goers (for $785 a ticket). Airship Ventures just brought one of their Zeppelin NTs over from Germany and it will be moored at Moffett Field. MAKE contributor Todd Lappin was lucky enough to get a ride on the ship and posted a flight report on Telstar Logistics:
Operated by a startup called Airship Ventures, the Zeppelin NT will be based out of Moffett Field, Calfornia -- a fitting home, as Moffett was built by the US Navy during the 1920s to serve as a base for military dirigibles.The new Zeppelins are filled with the inert helium instead of highly flammable hydrogen, they're only about one-quarter the size of the old giants, and they're equipped with modern technology and avionics. Power is delivered by three Lycoming engines that put out around 200 horsepower each, and the airship frame is constructed from a combination of of aluminum and carbon fiber.
Flight Report: Aloft in a Zeppelin Airship
Up Ship! (Airship Ventures' blog, with a travelogue of their transatlantic and cross-country trip)
I just bought a new MacBook Pro. I like it. I was stunned at how bright the LED screen is. Then I realized it was only at half brightness. I don't mind the lack of a button under the trackpad. I pretend there's still a button under the trackpad. I rest my thumb where the button used to be. I'm OK with that, and it works for me.
I'm impressed with the precision of the casing. I picture dudes in white lab coats with metal instruments in their hands when I look at the tiny micro speaker holes. I don't remember picturing dudes in white lab coats before (OK maybe with the 1st gen iPhone). I'm surprised that it's not all that much thinner or lighter than the previous model though.
I like that, when lifting up the lid, the entire machine doesn't lift off the desk or try and skate away. I like that there's no latch, but miss an audible click that confirms it's fully closed. I like that all the inputs are on one side now. I don't like that it's the opposite side that I've configured my desk for.
I love the glass screen. I'll still need to plug into a non-glossy screen for any real color work. I've been OK with that. I think the speakers are louder than the previous model. I doubt my hearing has improved over the last few days, but if it has, then the speaker volume remains the same as the previous model. I'd be OK with that.
I was shocked how small the box it comes in is. I'm happy that Apple is considering packaging waste now. This reduced packaging lowers the "unboxing excitement" by approximately 4%. I'm OK with that.
I like this new MacBook Pro.
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Elfdoll: Don't Call It A Toy Company“We think that we are not a doll company, we are artists,” says Elfdoll Foreign Trade Manager Yeounjoo Lim, best known to her customers and friends as Ms. Cholong...
Ms. Cholong’s job is part curator, part community organizer and part salesperson, bringing together BJD enthusiasts for events where purchasing the handmade objects is only part of the fun. At the showroom’s October 25 party, hobbyists arrived with arms filled with pieces from their own collections reconfigured to fit Halloween images of comic book heroes, steampunks, fairies, Japanese-styled Lolitas and goth boys in drag...
“Other companies, when they market the dolls, they actually create characters for them,” says Chris Holz of Melbourne, Australia, a collector who happened to arrive in Los Angeles just in time for this event. “The Elfdolls don’t have a background. They’ve got a name, but that’s tantamount to just identifying the doll. When people buy them, it’s whatever they want.”
Gordon Charlton uses the feedback of two walkie-talkies to make beautiful interesting music. Rob B has more info and a video over at BB Gadgets.
My task for the morning is to vote!
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Boing Boing pal Todd Lappin took a preview ride in the Airship Ventures craft that will be debuting on Halloween in the Bay Area (see previous BB post about that). Here's a snip from Todd's account:
Operated by a startup called Airship Ventures, the Zeppelin NT will be based out of Moffett Field, Calfornia -- a fitting home, as Moffett was built by the US Navy during the 1920s to serve as a base for military dirigibles.Flight Report: Aloft in a Zeppelin Airship (Telstar Logistics)The new Zeppelins are filled with the inert helium instead of highly flammable hydrogen, they're only about one-quarter the size of than the old giants, and they're equipped with modern technology and avionics. Power is delivered by three Lycoming engines that put out around 200 horsepower each, and the airship frame is constructed from a combination of of aluminum and carbon fiber.
Boarding an airship is not at all like boarding a conventional aircraft, because an airship doesn't sit still; it tends to bob and sway as the wind blows the big balloon around. As a result, climbing on board the Zeppelin is a bit like stepping from a stable dock onto a boat that's rocking on a gentle sea.
Previously: Historic Halloween Steampunk Airship Ride With Victorian Rockers Abney Park
Sarah Palin has been unsurprising in her criticisms of Barack Obama's credentials and policies, fulfilling the traditional role of the vice presidential candidate being the most aggressive and pointed rhetorical attacker in a campaign. But a closer look at her deliberate use of vernacular and language reveals that she has gone far beyond any other candidate in vice presidential history in the dangerous and irresponsible implications of her attacks. She has phrased her attacks on Obama in a way that avoids accountability to the press while specifically addressing the subset of her audience who are most likely to advocate extreme actions against Obama.What Sarah Palin is Saying (dashes.com)I don't usually write about politics here; I leave the ugliness to those who seem to revel in it. But I think a lot about language, usually in a more lighthearted context like talking about yo mama jokes or lolcats. What's striking to me this election season, though, is that Sarah Palin has chosen to abuse her command of language so obviously without suffering any serious criticism for it thus far.
The crux of the issue is simple:
(1) Sarah Palin has unequivocally associated Barack Obama with the idea of terrorism and specifically with "terrorists".(2) Republican President George Bush has defined in our National Security Strategy, and the Republican Party's platform affirms, that we may identify and strike at terrorists before they have committed any defined acts of aggression against American citizens.
(3) George Bush has made clear, by stating before a joint session of Congress that "Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists."
(4) Palin has used deliberate choice of language to avoid these connections being highlighted by the media, while increasing the likelihood that the target audience for her message will be incited by her statements.
Through these arguments, it becomes clear that Sarah Palin's assertions are designed not to prove that Obama is unqualified for the office of the Presidency of the United States. Rather, she appears to be attempting to convince a substantial portion of her supporters that Obama supports terrorism against the United States and thus should be, at the very least, incarcerated as an enemy combatant (which we are doing to American citizens already) or at worst, assassinated for supporting terror. She has done this knowing full well that she can retain plausible deniability thanks to the ambiguity of her statements as they'll be interpreted by the media, by her detractors, and by her more reasonable supporters.

The great writers' guide to DIY - Features, Books - The Independent via RW.
In his book Kafka's Soup, Mark Crick parodied literary giants by imagining how their their best-known characters would cook. Now, in Sartre's Sink, he's got them tackling home improvements...Hanging wallpaper with Ernest Hemingway
Tools: Pasting brush, Wallpaper brush, Decorator's scissors, Pasting table, Plumb line
Materials: Wallpaper, Wallpaper paste
The old man had worked for two days and two nights to strip away the old wallpaper and now on the morning of the third day the time to hang the new paper had come and he was tired. His palms were blistered from long hours scraping away the old paper and the blisters had begun to weep. The old man felt the pain in his hands as he looked again at the bare walls of the room. "Room, thou art big. But I will finish this trabajo that I have begun," he said. "Or I will die trying."
For too long DIY books have suffered the neglect of the literary Establishment. Finally, here in one volume, are the essential DIY tips of the world's greatest writers. Dostoyevsky tells of a young man employed by an elderly lady to retile her bathroom; Caesar puts up a shelf for his rebellious tribe of adolescenti; the existentialist hero of the Sartre pastiche is both disgusted and nauseated to discover in a blocked sink the revelation of his own condition. We also learn how to repair a dripping tap under Conrad's eyes, replace a window pane with a voyeuristic Milan Kundera, and hang wallpaper under the watchful eye of Mark Twain. Other handy hints include how to: replace a roof tile; remedy a squeaking floor board; remove a carpet stain and bleed a radiator, by writers, including Bronte, Shakespeare, Duras, Salinger and Paul Auster. As in "Kafka's Soup", each piece is illustrated by a famous artist, including da Vinci, Hokusai and Rembrandt.
For too long DIY books have suffered the neglect of the literary Establishment. Finally, here in one volume, are the essential DIY tips of the world's greatest writers. Dostoyevsky tells of a young man employed by an elderly lady to retile her bathroom; Caesar puts up a shelf for his rebellious tribe of adolescenti; the existentialist hero of the Sartre pastiche is both disgusted and nauseated to discover in a blocked sink the revelation of his own condition. We also learn how to repair a dripping tap under Conrad's eyes, replace a window pane with a voyeuristic Milan Kundera, and hang wallpaper under the watchful eye of Mark Twain. Other handy hints include how to: replace a roof tile; remedy a squeaking floor board; remove a carpet stain and bleed a radiator, by writers, including Bronte, Shakespeare, Duras, Salinger and Paul Auster. As in "Kafka's Soup", each piece is illustrated by a famous artist, including da Vinci, Hokusai and Rembrandt.
And you thought your gardening conditions were unfriendly? This guy has successfully created raised beds to grow a garden in Iraq.

I particularly like the wick design: the buried bottles have parachute cord running to holes poked in the sides. Filled with water, they slowly feed moisture into the soil throughout the day.
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Today only - get CrossOver (usually $70) for free - runs Win apps on Mac and Linux... Saw this all over the place today, downloading now...
CodeWeavers' mission is to make Linux and Mac OS X fully Windows compatible operating systems. We do this through the power of Wine, which powers all of our CrossOver products. The CrossOver products make it possible to run Windows programs on Mac OS X and Linux without needing a copy or license for Windows itself. Wine is an open-source reimplementation of the Win32 API for Unix-based operating systems. Wine allows Windows applications to be run without a Windows operating system license. CodeWeavers is the largest corporate sponsor of the Wine Project, and contributes all of its work to free Wine.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Computers | Digg this!
"These individuals probably ingested harmine in therapeutic or medicinal practices, some maybe related to pregnancy and childbirth," said study co-author Juan Pablo Ogalde, a chemical archaeologist at the University of Tarapacá in Arica, Chile.Drugs Found In Hair of Ancient Andean Mummies
"However, it is possible also that consumption of harmine was involved in religious rituals, said Ogalde, whose research appeared online October 14 in the Journal of Archaeological Science.
X-rays showed that the adult male—who was buried with items of social prestige such as panpipes, a four-pointed hat, and a snuffing tray—had damage near the nose, perhaps from sniffing.
As for the baby, Ogalde speculated that the mother had consumed the drug and passed it on to her offspring during pregnancy or breast-feeding.
"The fact this mind-altering substance was found even with a one-year-old shows how much a part of their life it was," said archaeologist Alexei Vranich of the University of California, Los Angeles, who did not participate in the study.
That's the corporate code of conduct on free speech and privacy I've been talking about in generalities for quite some time. By midnight Tuesday U.S. East Coast time, the full set of documents and list of initial signatories will be made publicly available at globalnetworkinitiative.org.Link to her piece on rconversation.blogs.com.
On that website you'll be able to read the full text of the Principles on free expression and privacy. A group of companies, human rights organizations, socially responsible investment funds, academics, and free speech groups spent the last two-plus years reaching agreement on what should go into that document. There will also be a Governance Charter and a set of Implementation Guidelines giving more detail on how companies should adhere to the core principles. There will be an FAQ, list of participants, and contact people for the organizations that have joined the Global Network Initiative so far. The hope is that many more companies, NGOs, investment funds, and academic institutions around the world will join in the coming months.
The initial plan was to release the news so that the first news reports about the initiative would come out closer to the website's unveiling at 12:01am Wednesday EDT or 12:01pm HKT. But the story leaked early and the San Francisco Chronicle reported it on Monday without any comment from the participants who had all agreed not to talk until the official launch. Since then, the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, WSJ China Blog, the AP, AFP and others have reported the story with remarks from some of the participants. We can expect more coverage in the next 24 hours.
A few people have called me asking "does this thing have any teeth" or "is this thing more than just a figleaf for companies to get congress off their backs?"
Organizations like Human Rights Watch, Human Rights in China, Human Rights First, and the Committee to Protect Journalists would not be putting their reputations behind this thing if they didn't think it was meaningful.

BB pal Tim Walker from The Ministry of Unkown Science and the Grilled Cheese Invitational shares a cool election-themed music remix with us:
One of our brethern of the MOUS, Tano Sokolow, did an amazing remix/mash-up of Barack Obama's Yes We Can with Lee Dorsey's Yes We Can Can song. It's totally fucking amazing and brings tears to my jaded eyes! Listen for yourself and see!Direct MP3 Link, web page with the music all up in it.
Start your election night victory party off right with this track I put together. The original artist is Lee Dorsey, and I encourage you to go buy his music, it's wonderful stuff. The track Yes We Can was written by Alain Toussaint.
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3D scanner using a webcam and laser pointer.
More:

HOW TO - $10 XY Laser scanner.

Make - Volume 14 - Homebrew 3D Scanner.
If you use/make these, post up your favorites in the comments.
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It's Tuesday again! This week I am making a scary pumpkin. Nothing gory or disgusting, just something that will scare the kiddies and hopefully score me some candy. How? Well, I am glad you asked. I rummaged through my parts bins and came up with an idea. What if I connected a horn to an Arduino and let out a nice blast when someone came around trick-or-treating. Hopefully they are so scared they drop their bag-o-candy and run away, leaving me with plenty of treats.
Note: It's a joke people! No, I am not taking candy from kids (other than my own). Have fun, and be nice!
What you need:
Tools you need:
Step 1: Cut up the pumpkin
You can use a real pumpkin, but I picked this one up for $5 at a local craft store. Using a real one is fine, but photographing it over a few days can get messy so I decided to use a foam version.
The foam pumpkins are really easy to carve. So far it looks like a classic, smiling, jack-o-lantern. The kids will never suspect anything.
Step 2: Add the nose button
I had an arcade game button, so I used it for the nose, and a old doorbell button I used to trigger the horn. You can use any button that you have in your scrap bin.
Solder some wires to the "nose button" so you can assemble the electronics outside the pumpkin. Attach one wire to the ground of the Arduino and the other wire to pin (7). Also, you need an additional wire with a 10K resistor to ground. (See step 3 for a simple diagram) Speaking of Halloween, that is some scary soldering! Yuck.
How globes are made - via Kottke.
The Chicago History Museum's "Mapping Chicago: The Past and the Possible" exhibition also looks at Replogle Globes, Inc., which has been turning maps into globes in Chicago for over 77 years. Replogle is the world's largest globe manufacturer. With their help, you can discover how globes are made.
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It's made of meat, all of it... @ The Daneyal Mahmood Gallery....
Meat After Meat Joy brings together the work of contemporary artists who use meat in their work (raw meat, the concept of meat, its symbolism and viscera) 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 annihilationRead more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Arts | Digg this!

Ahh another classic is reborn. Check out this cool project where you can make the classic "Head in a Crystal Ball". Of course not only does it move it also talks and floats as well. Here is a description from the original Disney concept:
"Resting inside the crystal ball is the ghoulish disembodied head of Madame Leota, the house's resident medium. Her hair is long and white, uncombed, her face a ghoulish yellow-green, and she looks around the room and moves her entire face in a rather animated way (for a ghost at least!) "
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Emily Barletta's crocheted sculptures via NOTCOT.

Casper's brother made him this totally sweet bronze sculpture using Styrofoam and a LEGO minifig. Via Brothers Brick
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Looks like more folks are talking about making things more than buying things on Twitter... Not sure if it means anything but it's fun to poke around with the Twist site. If you want to follow MAKE we're on there too...

The inevitable mashup of the LilyPad Arduino and the XBee radio is in its final stages. Soon it will be easier than ever to integrate XBee communication in your wearbale projects. Look for these modules soon at your favorite physical coputing etailer soon.
LilyPad XBee Ready for Manufacture
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This app called "BeatMaker" for the iPhone is one of a huge list of cool new music creation applications that are out for the device. This one doubles as a portable music production center with a drum machine, sampler, and sequencer that usually only exists in desktop applications. Check out the link for the list of all of these cool new ways to bring the funk to your pocket.
iPhone Gems: The Best Music Creation Apps

These in-guitar effects kits look interesting -
The MODboard concept is simple- Take the best vintage style analog guitar effects, miniaturize them, and mount them on a completely modular circuit board. Add the right output jack, knob setup and switching setup to accomodate your guitar, and you're ready to roll. A few simple solder connections for input and power, then everything plugs in with instantly removable modular connectors.Offered in tremolo, wah, compressor, delay, chorus, and tube distortion flavors. While the "best vintage style" description is of course very subjective, the concept seems sound[npi]. Glancing down toward ones feet during a dimly lit gig is never fun - moving at least your most important effect's controls onto the instrument body sounds like a smart idea. Any music-makers out there ever used these? Or have any good tips for mounting your own effects 'in-instrument'? - MODboards
Of course, one could always just duct tape a pedal to their axe a la DEVO -

Sidni writes -
Dr. Aaron Lanterman of Georgia Tech covers the analysis of several modules used in analog modular synthesis as well as digital synthesis techniques. All lectures posted online for free!Definitely a class that would've greatly increased my interest in math back in school - very cool!
Moog (east coast) and Buchla (west coat) developed their ideas about voltage controlled synthesizers independently. Moog used a pitch control standof of 1 volt/octave, which works out to 0.08333... volts/semitone (the pitch difference between to adjacent notes on the piano is a semitone; there are twelve semitones per octave). Buchla preferred to use 0.1 volts/semitone, which works out to 1.2 volts/octave.Hence, if to try to directly drive a Moog oscillator from a Buchla pitch control source, or vice-versa, everything will be horribly out of tune.
a) Design an circuit with a single op amp that will covert pitch control voltages from the Moog standard to the Buchla standard. You may assume that your conversion module is given an input from a voltage source with zero output impedance and is being fed to a module with an infinite input impedance; you also do not need worry about input and output protection (assume nobody will be abusing your module). For this part of the exercise, assume you have perfect "zero-tolerance" resistors.
b) Off-the-shelf resistors never exactly match their listed values. Let's do a "worst case" analysis for the case where your circuit is given a one volt input. If you use 5% resistors, assuming the true resistance is uniformly distributed, what is the highest voltage you might get out? What is the lowest voltage? How many semitones above and below the desired value are these voltages in the Buchla pitch standard?
c) Repeat the above analysis for 1% resistors.
Head over to the site to take the course yourself (well, virtually at least) - Electronics for Music Synthesis
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This project uses a PIC microcontroller with an RS232 interface on one end and the PS/2 keyboard or mouse hookup on the other side. Interesting way to easily get your keyboard or mouse talking serial in order to integrate it into a project and communicate with software.
via Electronics Lab
Further proof of the music-making possibilities that lie dormant in many of our common electronics.
[via Matrixsynth]
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Canon has released new firmware for the EOS 50D, taking it to version 1.0.3. The latest version corrects three issues, two of which the company describes as 'rare.' One of the problems addressed is the much-discussed Err99 error message that can prevent the camera taking photos.

There are Halloween decorations, and then there are Halloween decorations! This is one of the creepiest DIY decorations I have seen. It uses a fairly expensive skeleton as a base, but I am sure there are other options.
Read more about DIY: Horrifying Corpse
More:

DIY Halloween contest! This is the BIG ONE!!!!
Man this makes me so jealous of our Neighbors to the North...A Vancouver cafe/workshop/gallery/gigspace [Solder & Sons] that sells fine tea and electronic musical instruments and modules. Is it as cool as it sounds?
Matthew Williams sent in his Barduino. It's an Arduino powered bar monkey for your next party. Remember, alcohol and electronics don't mix, but electronics can mix alcohol. [Thanks Matthew]
It was developed using the Ruby Arduino Framework (http://rad.rubyforge.org/) and is driven using a Ruby DSL (domain specific language) so anyone can write simple recipes.
More about the Barduino
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Nikon has today announced a firmware update for the D300, taking it to v1.10. The update improves focus performance in dynamic-area AF mode contrast-detect mode in live view but also looks at a whole range of other issues. Click through for links to more information and the downloads.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Bhaskar Roy - Photo credit: Robin Good
QIK is one among several powerful new tools which allows anyone with a compatible mobile phone and an adequate data-transmission plan to broadcast live directly from your mobile phone, creating the opportunity for tens of thousands of users to experience all kind of events without needing to be there.
If you enjoy using Twitter for your daily micro-blogging activities, you're going to love Qik. It's like twittering enhanced with videos. And if the social network fever really got you, Qik is developing a new feature which will enable you to stream all of your live videos directly to your Facebook Profile. Sounds cool, isn't it?
Here the video interview (the audio quality isn't that great this time, and we appreciate your patience on this), alongside a full English text transcription:
Intro
Robin Good: Hi guys! Here's Robin Good from Rome, Italy, and I'm here with Bhaskar Roy, connecting from California! He's one of the co-founders of Qik, one of my favourite companies, giving you the possibility from you standard Nokia phone, iPhone, whatever good mobile phone you've got, to stream live your video from anywhere you are. Ciao Bhaskar! How are you doing today? Bhaskar Roy: I'm doing very good Robin, I'm glad to be here and talking to you.
A Large User Base
Robin Good: Good, in fact for me as well, because we users of Qik and the people who are curious and want to know more about it, want to find directly from you what are the latest news. How's it going with Qik? How many people are using it to this moment... how many active users have you got? Bhaskar Roy: Very good question Robin. We are seeing a lot of users, tens of thousands of users across around hundred countries, now you think about it. The great finding is these people around the world have started appreciating this concept and using it, and to the point we see close to 35 per cent of our users, I would say active every week. Every week 35 per cent of our user base actually using the product and getting value from it, so we're very excited.
QIK Applications
Robin Good: What about unique applications, stuff that you wouldn't have thought about, that people are using Qik for? Have you noticed specific either entertaining, spontaneous, or even business-like applications that are springing up spontaneously by the use of this new technology? Bhaskar Roy: Absolutely. We're surprised pretty much everyday of how people use it. I'll give you some examples. One is: we were surprised that Pope, the Vatican, started using Qik. They were using it when they were going out, and basically that was something called World Get Together 2008 or something that like in Australia, on World Youth Day 2008. The Pope traveled to Australia and he was addressing everyone there and the entire travel diaries were captured by the media around Pope, and the priests around Pope using Qik. That was like we had never ever, when we started, imagined that the Vatican would start using Qik. That was a pleasant surprise. We also are finding that in terms of businesses media companies are starting to use Qik. People are using this mainly to broadcast live news, or capture live news. We're finding fields service type application, and half recently what we found is there is one particular person we came to know who's using it for telemedicine type purposes. We're finding very interesting business-use cases, but the things that surprises us all the time is when people themselves come up with and consumers come up with a new way of using it. I'll give you another example about a person: he was a dad, he was expecting a kid, but the kid was not due before two months or so and he was traveling, and no-one can say what happens. The kid decided to come early and he was able to experience that entire birth of his kid, and be there using Qik. This was of course a private video, and this video was kept private. We don't even have access to it, but the way we came to know about that, he sent us an e-mail saying: "I wouldn't have ever been able to participate in this without a technology like Qik". Those kind of things gets us and energizes us to do more and more of this.
QIK New Features
Robin Good: Fantastic reports, excellent stories. Thank you Bhaskar for sharing these. How about new features? Recently my phone was complaining about upgrading, and we users sometimes now get more scared than excited when there's a new upgrade because like on the iPhones, upgrades from Apple kind of lock you into more business protections or DRM schemes. Anyhow a friend of mine I guess misunderstood, and also I was leading to misunderstanding myself, because, as soon as I upgraded, my phone started to say: "Do you want to access this billable event?" Is Qik going to be a costly event for streaming for me in the future? What's happening? Bhaskar Roy: No, that is one of the requirements as we're going through the certification process with these manufacturers, and Symbian certifications. Those are the requirements that we have. It's not that we are charging for it, but letting the end user know that it's a billable event, because that is your paying for the data associated with it. Once we use the data plans of users, we actually have to inform our users about it. We are taking those steps, which enables us to inform the users that these are some of the things that are happening in the application. Don't be surprised if there's a data charge cost, and these are some of the requirements which are for the Symbian certifications and we're going through those processes right now to build a complete certified applications and what you saw. Robin Good: Oh, that's good to know because, again, we users are as well skeptical, but many times very ignorant as well. The message gets to be a little ambiguous in our eyes as we would think naturally it's not the charge of the data transfer, which we expect by default to be charged for, but the use of Qik that comes into discussion. Maybe in the future, Nokia, Qik and all the companies can work to make these clearer and not misunderstood by the user, because it's going to be a disadvantage to all the participants. Bhaskar Roy: Right, absolutely.
QIK Meets Facebook
Robin Good: You've got some real new features coming up for us users. I know because I've been experimenting with one that is absolutely cool, but you want to have the honor of telling us about it? Bhaskar Roy: Sure, sure. I think you discovered our Facebook application, Robin. We are, as you can see, earlier we used to have a Facebook app, but what we have done is enhance that application, so that when you're streaming live, you're streaming live via Facebook Profile, people can actually chat and comment from that Facebook profile, then build out your entered comments. You also have the ability to just not look at the live video, but also at the videos you've done in the past. You can look at those videos via Facebook. And whenever you're streaming live, you also have the ability for this to go into the news feed which maybe you've discovered as a part of this. We had a Facebook app, quite some time back. We've enhanced it, and we're working on it. It's still in testing mode. It's great you discovered that and started playing with it. Great, let us know if you have any feedback, we're always looking for that!
What Makes QIK Better Than Other Mobile Live Video Streaming Solutions?
Robin Good: Coolio! Yeah, I wasn't sure if I discovered something, I was onto something new, or I was just waking up too late, and I'm glad that it is something new. I invite everyone to go and try it out though this is still in super-alpha-beta testing mode. It's still good to try it out and provide feedback to Bhaskar and his team. What did I want to ask you that was in my notes: many people ask me: "Robin, why are you using Qik, there are a number now, at least five, six, seven, live video streaming applications that I can use from my mobile phone and all seem pretty good". Some others have maybe some special features, you can use them from the PC, some others have a connection to the GPS, but now I see even Qik has it. If you were to market yourself against the competitors, I'm not even asking you to mention them, what would you think are the key features that make you stand out from the user standpoint, and that you would underline to a new user? Bhaskar Roy: It's a very good observation Robin. The key thing is looking at what our company is all about. All of us have been in real-time communication space, especially the founders for a long time, for a good nine to ten years prior to starting Qik. The key things that we focus on is: how can we enable people to stream hi-quality video? You are to a point where you can actually stream full 640x480 quality video from your Nokia N95. We are focused on looking at how we can deliver very high quality video, whatever is possible, across all type of network conditions. Lot of people don't even realize it, but when pick a cell pocket, or you are not online on a cell network, you can still be streaming and what Qik will do, is whenever it discovers the network, it will automatically push it out, so you don't really have to worry about it. You can be in complete disconnected mode, streaming away, it will detect when the network comes in and push it out. When you are streaming and your battery dies, the next stand when you start up it will discover saying: "Hey, there are some stream which cut left over, which are not taken to the server". It will automatically start pushing those things out. We have tried to make it, so that from a user standpoint the technology is completely invisible, but there's powerful technology behind it. When you press that one button stream, it takes care of all the various conditions that could possibly happen, and makes sure that your stream is still going live, it's still going as high quality as possible.
QIK Business Model
Robin Good: Great news, indeed! Fantastic, I've become so accustomed to this stuff that I even forget telling my friends, but if you guys google "qik robin good" you can hear my video story of, I don't know six months ago or more, I was just amazed at this thing. I would go in the underground station, deep, under miles of concrete, and the thing would keep going. And when I go up again out of the next station Qik broadcasts everything out. It's fantastic. Outside of me being not part of the company, I really think that from this point of view, it's truly fantastic. To close fast with something that also some of my readers are interested into. What are you looking at in your future, the business model with which to survive. Is any surprise coming to us? Bhaskar Roy: No, I would say it won't be a surprise at all. We are very very open and we always take our users' feedback whenever we do something. It's just the nature of the way we are. You would see us very active on our blogs, talking to users and figuring out what to do next. We will be doing the same thing as we figure out what are the next steps of monetizing Qik. One of the key things that we are looking at is looking to see how we can provide premium services around this. The basics we're looking at we'll always be free, but to look at how can we enable premium services, and by that we're getting some requests from our users saying that if you add certain capabilities... if you look at providing some type of service level agreement that we'll be willing to pay some type of subscription fee for it. These are some of the things that we will be exploring. But those are still I would say in sometime 2009, so that it the time-frame when we can start working with our users and try to figure those things out as to what we can do. Robin Good: In fact it'd be nice that we could use the billable option, to create channels that allow the live streaming of subscription services and premium value content. That is something that even small publishers like me would be very interested into. I look forward to that, I thank you, for your time and I invite everyone to go out and try Qik, Q-I-K.com.
Supported Mobile Phones
Robin Good: What are the range of models now supported Bhasker? Bhaskar Roy: We now support close to some 70 odd models. Nokia, a lot of Nokia phones, a lot of Windows Mobile phones, we support iPhone, we also have a lot of support for the lower Nokia phones, HTC phones, Sony-Ericsson phones, Samsung phones. We do support a huge variety of phones. If you go to Qik.com, at the footer of the page, there's a link to all supported phones, click on it, and you'll be able to see all the various phones that we support. Robin Good: Fantastic, thanks a lot for your information. I can only really thank you so much for sharing those info, and keep it up, keep us in the loop. We're really happy customers for now, keep it doing like this Bhaskar! Bhaskar Roy: Thank you Robin, Thank you. Robin Good: Have a great day, Ciao!

Seth is working on a cool project, the AudioTouch - A multi-user, multi-touch musical interface... Here's what you need to get started...
Unibrain Fire-i Color camera $22.20 Swann Wide-angle IR Camera Lens $19.33 50 Osram SFH485 IR LEDs $27.53 4 Breadboards $15.80 Acrylic 24" x 36" $43.91 Wood Frame $18 Sorta Clear 40 Silicone Rubber $45 Rosco Grey Screen $30.87 Projector Mirror $10Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in DIY Projects | Digg this!

Good to see some vids from Joe @ Prototype This - The Oscilloscope, soldering, multimeter! The also released a full episode "Mind controlled car".

The KNFB Reader lets users photograph printed material, then reads it back... The possibilities of a 'portable eye' - The Boston Globe.
When Peter Alan Smith pulls out his phone in a crowded Back Bay restaurant, there's no clue that his Nokia is by far the most expensive mobile phone in the entire place. He has about $2,400 in software loaded onto the $600 device.
But then it becomes apparent what's unique about Smith's phone: A flash goes off when he snaps a picture of the menu, and a few seconds later, his phone has translated the page of text into speech, and started reciting the options through his earpiece at a rapid clip.
Smith developed a degenerative eye disease when he was 18, and he is now legally blind. It has been about two decades since he could read a restaurant menu independently. He first heard about the phone on a podcast series called "Blind Cool Tech" and took out a low-interest loan to buy it.
More:

Let There Be Speech. How do you make a $200 computer for blind kids? By Fernando Botelho... MAKE 03 - page 40.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

squirrel messenger
unidog
wiggles dog wigs
dancing chicken
owls
daily mail picnic
frog
inner city snail
counting sheep
squeek the squirrel
hamsters in hats
uni the hedgehog
Permalink for this edition. Web Zen is created and curated by Frank Davis, and re-posted here on Boing Boing with his kind permission. Web Zen Home and Archives, Store (Thanks Frank!)

Dot writes:
I kept trying to think of something fun and different to do for my halloween cocktails this year, and this is what I came up with : Using tapioca pearls for fun cocktails!
Check out her instructable for making these creepy cocktails.
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