


Today, Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories announced a new kit, the Meggy Jr RGB. Meggy is a development platform for handheld pixel games built around a 8x8 RGB LED matrix display and driven by an ATmega168 MCU. You can write your own games for it and use it through the Arduino dev environment. Nifty!
A unique feature of Meggy Jr RGB is that it is designed to be mounted inside a "handle set" -- a wooden or plastic case that's safer and more pleasant to hold than a bare circuit board. You can make, mod and customize your own handle sets to suit your taste-- These are like faceplates in that you can switch whenever you want to suit your mood or the game that you're playing, however different handle sets can radically change what the Meggy Jr looks and feels like. Above, you can see what our basic handles (top) look like, as compared to a set of custom smoke-colored batwing handles (middle).
You can design your own custom handles, starting from our templates-- either to make them on your own or to have them fabbed by laser shops like Ponoko or Pololu. (Ponoko in particular offers some very interesting materials to make cases out of, like felt and bamboo!)You can download the two handle designs shown above as PDF and Inkscape SVG files (780 kB .ZIP file). Each handle design consists of a sandwich of two pieces of material that go above and below the circuit board. For a perfect fit, fab the front piece (the carapace) from 0.24" thick material (or slightly thinner), and the back piece (the plastron) from 0.12" (or so) thick material.
Meggy Jr RGB
Meggy page at the Evil Mad Science Shop
When using existing libraries, services, tools, and methods from outside Microsoft, we must be respectful of licenses, copyrights, and patents. Generally, you want to carefully research licenses and copyrights (your contact in Legal and Corporate Affairs can help), and never search, view, or speculate about patents. I was confused by this guidance till I wrote and reviewed one of my own patents. The legal claims section -- the only section that counts -- was indecipherable by anyone but a patent attorney. Ignorance is bliss and strongly recommended when it comes to patents.Of course, technically, a patent is supposed to be written so that someone skilled in the art can replicate the invention from the patent alone. But, when even patent holders can't understand their own patents, it's quite clear that reality doesn't match up with the theory here. So, the next time you hear a patent system defender claiming the importance of disclosure, it might be worth pointing out that one of the biggest patent holding companies in the world instructs its own employees to ignore patents, because you can't actually learn anything from them in the first place.
My five-year-old daughter asked to set the table a couple of night ago. Here's how she set her place.
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In search of smooth-spinning hardware to use as a rotary input device, nvillar made use of an old hard drive - resulting in a sweet controller with excellent aesthetics -
We admired the quality of the bearings in the motor that drives the disk plates, enjoyed the fact that even a soft flick would get it spinning for a long time, and wondered whether we could sample an output from it when it was spun by hand, in much the same way that an electric motor, when turned, acts as a dynamo and outputs a voltage.Nice pushbuttons! See the instructable for all the project deets - HDDJ: Turning an old hard disk drive into a rotary input device [via Hack a Day] Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Computers | Digg this!The answer is yes - and it's a very simple process to turn a hard disk into a rotary input device that has some unique properties. All you'll need is an old hard disk drive, a few op amps, resistors and a programmable microcontroller of some kind.
"Monopoly: The Movie"? Ridley Scott may direct, "with an eye toward giving it a futuristic sheen along the lines of his iconic 'Blade Runner.'" Alex Balk wonders: "Do Top Hats Dream Of Electric Trains?"
PENNYBAGS: [Slowly, deliberately] I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe. Boots mortgaging property to tiny dogs. Apartments torched on Baltic Avenue just for the insurance money. I watched someone roll triple sixes and land on Free Parking where a Get Out Of Jail Free card had been tossed into the kitty. All those moments will be lost in time, like a bank error in your favor. Time to die. [As the rain continues to fall, he drops his head and silently expires.]
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A gardener's delight. One of a bunch of photos of people and vehicles loaded with stuff.
I played with an early prototype of delightfully engrossing Meggy Jr at Maker Faire Austin in October. It's an open-source kit to build your own pixel-based video games. It's made by my friends at Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories: Windell, Lenore, and Chris.
Meggy Jr RGB is a new kit that we designed as a platform to develop handheld pixel games. It's based around a fully addressable 8x8 RGB LED matrix display, and features six big fat buttons for comfy game play. The kit is driven by an ATmega168 microcontroller, and you can write your own games or otherwise control it through the Arduino development environment. Meggy Jr is fast, programmable, open source and hackable. And fun.Kit prices range from $65 to $95. Meggy Jr RGB



Gorgeous keyboard mod from a German maker, inspired by Jake von Slatt's steampunk keyboard mod. Love the gothic-y brass frame pieces.
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iOscilloscope displays the iPhone's mic in as waveform with fast fourier transform or Sonogram modes - iOscilloscope
For a more advanced view check out SignalScope -

- SignalScope
- Analyze signals coming from the iPhone's built-in or headset microphone, or from the built-in accelerometer.
- Zoom in or out on spectrum and waveform displays with two-finger expand/pinch gestures, even while the analyzer is running.
- Pan vertically or horizontally in zoomed displays with two-finger scrolling.
- Pinpoint individual sample values or frequencies with a cursor.
- Save high-resolution spectrum or waveform display images to the iPhone's Camera Roll photo album.
Sorry, no hardware BNC connector for iPhone as of yet ;)
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This is a case from the Insight Community, a powerful new marketplace that connects companies with intelligent communities like Techdirt. Click here to learn more.
From both the digital nomad's perspective and the perspective of anyone who manages digital nomads, one of the biggest challenges is in maintaining productivity on the go. For some, the freedom of being a digital nomad allows them to be more productive, by letting them work at the best time and the most convenient places. However, for others, the lack of structure makes productivity difficult. For those of you who are digital nomads, what strategies do you employ to make sure you remain motivated and productive on the go. For those of you who manage digital nomads, what strategies are there to employ to keep your workforce motivated, even if they're not under the same level of supervision and communication as in-house employees?
Dell is sponsoring the conversations here, and the best results will be placed on a site sponsored by Dell: http://whitepaper.digitalnomads.com/. The content may later also be added to a whitepaper and a wiki on the subject, representing the world's first "crowdsourced whitepaper." While Dell is sponsoring the conversation, the content is vendor neutral. Just provide your insights on the question at hand.
View Case Details at InsightCommunity.com
Fox President of Alternative Entertainment Mike Darnell calls it "a reverse Punk’d. Instead of the worst day of your life and then a joke at the end, this is the reverse. This is the best day of your life, and then we arrest you.”
One of three set-ups just shot in Arizona features the cops luring a criminal to a movie set with the promise of making him an extra and paying him a couple hundred dollars. An elaborate film set is staged and filming begins on a faux movie. The set-up continues as the director then gets mad at the lead actor, fires him and replaces him with the law-breaking extra.The scene escalates with the fake director introducing the mark to a supposed studio mogul and continuing to create this dream-comes-true sequence. Finally, all the participants are revealed as officers of the law, and the criminal is apprehended (before signing waivers to let the footage be used in the show).
New reality show "Smile, You're Under Arrest" (Via The Agitator)
UPDATE: Fox is working with the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office on this show, which is no surprise. Here are some previous posts about Sheriff Joe Arpaio and the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office:
• Maricopa County Sheriff's Department burn down a house and kill puppy over traffic citations
• Sheriff Joe Arpaio arrests newspaper owners for complaining about grand jury investigation
• Real life transmission of the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office Madison Street Jail
• Jail's official color is pink
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Michael Una brings us the Beep-It optically controlled squarewave generator in a petri dish enclosure -
This minimalist electronic musical instrument eschews esoteric interface in favor of intuitive, expressive control. One button turns the device on or off, which can produce a continuous tone or a rhythmic sequence. One sensor varies pitch of the output waveform in response to ambient light. The resulting system encourages playfulness and body movement.In addition to selling these, Michael has kindly posted the hand-drawn schematic to his blog - Beep-it for Sale
[via Create Digital Music]
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Aquila was a yearbook for Japanese American high school students interned in a camp during WWII. The University of California has scans of two editions.
Scan of WWII US internment camp for Japanese Americans (Via This Isn't Happiness)




I guess when you're known for being a virtuosic fabricator of fabulous tech-mods in cyberspace, you're kids aren't going to let you slide by with a wriggling animatronic hand from Target for Halloween. Here, the day before flying out to deliver the keynote at the California Steampunk Convention, Jake von Slatt presented this Wizard of Oz themed Halloween display at his house outside of Boston.
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We've seen plenty of occassions where, in an attempt to offset falling revenues from music sales, the recording industry chooses to attempt to extract royalties from 'performances' which have actually added value to the music. In yet another such situation, Australian health clubs are faced with a 3000 percent rise in their royalty rates for playing music during exercise classes from the Phonographic Performance Company of Australia (PPCA). Currently, the rate is $0.90 per class, with an annual cap of $2,654 ($0.80/$2,302 USD); the proposed increases are to $31.67 ($26.89 USD) per class with no cap, or a monthly fee of $26.08 ($22.55 USD) per member. The drastic nature of these increases has prompted one Australian fitness club chain has partnered with the International Health, Racquet and Sportsclub Association (IHRSA) to resist the changes.
The chain's president said of the action, "We have no choice. If we don't fight this, we won't have an [Australian health club] industry left to fight for." While an increase of 30 times would undoubtedly negatively impact the clubs, it seems somewhat hyperbolic to suggest the industry would disappear as a result. More interesting is IHRSA president Joe Moore's observation that the change "has serious implications for clubs in other countries" - that is to say the change, if successful, would be used to argue for similar rises in performance royalties across the world - a tactic we have already seen from bodies purporting to represent musicians.
One factor neither side is really discussing (beyond the "our industry will collapse" rhetoric) is the potential consequences of these royalties being sufficiently high to cause health clubs and similar businesses to seek out alternative sources. Their core business is not to provide licensed music for their customers, so there's no reason why they couldn't play royalty-free music instead, simultaneously lessening the control the PPCA exerts over the music business, cutting off the existing income from royalties and promoting the competitors of the artists it supposedly represents. Perhaps the health clubs might lose some business through customers disliking the change of music in their classes (although that seems unlikely), but it would at least be a more powerful way to convey their message to the PPCA than to plead complete dependence.
Douglas Gresham is an expert at the Insight Community. To get insight and analysis from Douglas Gresham and other experts on challenges your company faces, click here.
The Yes Men printed over one million fake copies of the New York Times with a headline proclaiming that the Iraq War was over.
The Yes Men Distribute Fake New York Times: “Iraq War Ends”
"Why Malcolm Gladwell Thinks We Have Little Control Over Our Own Success (New York), Outliers: The Story of Success (Amazon)Consider, for instance...hockey stars. Relying on the work of a Canadian psychologist who noticed that a disproportionate number of elite hockey players in his country were born in the first half of the year, Gladwell explains what academics call the relative-age effect, by which an initial advantage attributable to age gets turned into a more profound advantage over time. Because Canada’s eligibility cutoff for junior hockey is January 1, Gladwell writes, “a boy who turns 10 on January 2, then, could be playing alongside someone who doesn’t turn 10 until the end of the year.” You can guess at that age, when the differences in physical maturity are so great, which one of those kids is going to make the league all-star team. Once on that all-star team, the January 2 kid starts practicing more, getting better coaching, and playing against tougher competition—so much so that by the time he’s, say, 14, he’s not just older than the kid with the December 30 birthday, he’s better. The solution? Double the number of junior hockey leagues—some for kids born in the first half of the year, others for kids born in the second half. Or, to apply the principle to something a bit more consequential (to non-Canadians, at least), Gladwell suggests that elementary and middle schools put students with January through April birthdays in one class, the May through August birthdays in another, and those with September through December in a third, in order “to level the playing field for those who—through no fault of their own—have been dealt a big disadvantage.”
Or take the case of Bill Gates. Gladwell cites a body of research finding that the “magic number for true expertise” is 10,000 hours of practice. “Practice isn’t the thing you do once you’re good,” Gladwell writes. “It’s the thing you do that makes you good.” Gladwell shows how Gates accumulated his 10,000 hours while in middle and high school in Seattle thanks to a series of nine incredibly fortunate opportunities—ranging from the fact that his private school had a computer club with access to (and money for) a sophisticated computer, to his childhood home’s proximity to the University of Washington, where he had access to an even more sophisticated computer. “By the time Gates dropped out of Harvard after his sophomore year to try his hand at his own computer software company,” Gladwell writes, “he’d been programming practically nonstop for seven consecutive years. He was way past 10,000 hours.” Yes, Gates is obviously brilliant, Gladwell concludes, but without the lucky breaks he had as a kid, he never could have had the opportunity to fulfill the true potential of that brilliance. How many similarly brilliant people never get that opportunity?
And then there are the math geniuses who, as anyone can’t help noticing, are disproportionately Asian. Citing the work of an educational researcher at the University of Pennsylvania, Gladwell attributes this phenomenon not to some innate mathematical ability that Asians possess but to the fact that children in Asian countries are willing to work longer and harder than their Western counterparts. That willingness, Gladwell continues, is due to a cultural legacy of hard work that stems from the cultivation of rice. Turning to a historian who studies ancient Chinese peasant proverbs, Gladwell marvels at what Chinese rice farmers used to tell one another: “No one who can rise before dawn 360 days a year fails to make his family rich.” Contrast that legacy with the one derived from Western agriculture—which holds that some fields be left fallow rather than be cultivated 360 days a year and which, by extension, led to the creation of an education system that allowed students to be left fallow for periods, like summer vacation. For American students from wealthy homes, summer vacation isn’t a problem; but, citing the research of a Johns Hopkins sociologist, Gladwell shows that it’s a profound handicap for students from poor homes, who actually outlearn their rich counterparts during the school year but then fall behind them when school lets out. “For its poorest students, America doesn’t have a school problem,” Gladwell concludes. “It has a summer-vacation problem.” So how to close the gap between rich and poor students? Get rid of summer vacation in inner-city schools.
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As the Democrats take power and the Republicans move out, it's pretty obvious that the Republicans must decentralize and build and do it using the Internet.
Scott Beale of Laughing Squid writes:
"Can Throwing", it's kind of like Parkour for recycling.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Green | Digg this!
Illustrator Derek Yaniger has a book of his illustrations called Wildsville.
Celebrating a retro subculture of tiki gods, hillbillies, and burlesque, this collection of Derek Yaniger's incredible body of 1950s-style cartoon art is a must for all tiki and Kustom Kulture addicts. The only work devoted to his illustrations for Cartoon Network, Marvel Comics (for which he worked on such titles as Hellraiser, Transformers: Generation 2, and Web of Spider-Man), and more, this book contains more than 150 original paintings and illustrations. Derek's illustration style, reminiscent of cocktail napkin art of the 1950s, delves into the retro world of beatniks, tiki bars, and Vegas glamour. Original cartoon art collectors, students of cartoon art, and fans of lowbrow artists will all find this an essential reference.Wildsville - The Art of Derek Yaniger
WFMU's Radio Freetown with DJ Franc O from 11/10/2008
Radio Freetown is a terrific new podcast from WFMU featuring West African pop music from the 1970s. Subscribe via iTunes
This has now been declared a Good Idea, so we're starting one with this entry. The winner gets applause, glory, and a spot at center stage in which to show off really well. The same goes for everyone else who turns in a good performance. The only difference is that Everyone Else doesn't also get a Gears of War 2 Special Edition Zune 120 GB (see description).
Note: it's a freebie, nothing more. If you're really worried about Boing Boing's purity, you can help protect it by winning the game. As you know, freebies emit a faint, kryptonite-like radiation that only affects Boingers; but since the arrangements call for donor Whitney Biaggi to ship the Zune directly to the winner, and since readers are of course immune to freebie-radiation, things should work out just fine.
We're going to be running more games and contests in the near future, with prizes from other donors. If you're planning to kick up a big fuss about some imagined commercialization, please bear in mind that (1.) freebies aren't terribly memorable unless someone makes a fuss about them; and (2.) eventually even you will get bored at having to kick up a fuss whenever someone snags a prize, and the rest of us will get bored a lot sooner than that.
You're a clever bunch. Let's play games instead.
The first one's simple: write some verse about one or more recurrent Boing Boing obsessions: steampunk, the TSA, unlikely mods, papercraft, mashups, gadgets, emergent properties of the Zombie Apocalypse, DIY, FISA, comics, photographers' rights, WTF, FTW, wristwatches, skiffy history, misused tasers, making a foo out of bar, cryptozoology, Tibet, animation, copyright abuse, drives, hacks, sex, robots, robot hacks, hacking sex, sex with robots, emergent properties of sex with steampunked robots during the Zombie Apocalypse forestalled by misuse of copyright by body-modded TSA official using LEDs and a 9-volt battery, et cetera, found dead on beach in Long Island. (Not a complete list.) Best poem wins. If you turn down the prize, you get a jar of marmalade, and the runner-up gets the Zune. The moderation guidelines still apply.
All other things being equal, your poem is likelier to win if it rhymes and scans; even more so if it's formal verse. Villanelles count more than limericks. Alternately, write it as a pastiche of a recognizable work or author. Pastiches may be prose, but may not be long, and had better be good. For extra extra credit, write your piece as an on-topic comment in some other thread, then re-post it here. All other things being equal, wit, language, and happy mutancy win.
Finally, feel free to suggest other games to be played in future threads.
Addendum: Tdawwg replies:
But limericks are formal verse,
the same as villanelles; you err
thus separating the two. Worse,
although their differences are fair,
they're unremarked by you: silk purse,
sow's ear, don't make of them a pair,
two distinct objects they, diverse.
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As we posted a couple weeks ago, one of our newest sponsors is Safari Books Online, the outfit that offers a digital library of tech books from publishers like O'Reilly, Apress, and Addison-Wesley. As part of Safari's sponsorship, they offered BB readers one month free online access to any of the following books: JavaScript: The Definitive Guide, Learning Perl, and Head First HTML with CSS & XHTML. "Though we recommend you write clear code, some people like writing code that's as hard to understand as possible... We don't recommend it for normal coding purposes, but it can be a fun game to write confusing code..."So in that spirit, we are holding an obfuscated code contest. To enter, come up with a wonderfully obfuscated code snippet that prints out the phrase "Boing Boing." Post the snippet in the comments thread. Then, we'll pick a winner with the shortest, most elegant, or creative bit of code. The snippets have to be executable!
Bob Logan reports that iTunes is selling great Disney old music. A commentor writes:
Randy Thornton (Disney Music Restoration Hero) has gotten a lot of great, classic stuff up on iTunes, including The (original) Mickey Mouse Club soundtrack (and the music from its serials!), Thrilling Chilling Sounds of the Haunted House, Babes In Toyland, Ludwig Von Drake, the never-before-released-anywhere 20,000 Leagues soundtrack and much, much more. Check it out (unfortunately, it takes some searching: It seems iTunes doesn't have them grouped in any logical way).Classic Disney on iTunes!
Golfer_X, of the darkly funny Riverside and San Bernardino Real Estate Blog, took this weird photo when he was in Las Vegas.
I spent the last weekend in Vegas. As you can see from the picture the hooker hawkers are not just handing out cards anymore. Now they walk around with lit billboads strapped to their backs! Freaking amazing. I don't quite understand why the city allows these guys on the street. Most of their handouts end up littering the streets. I took this picture out in front of the Paris Hilton.Photo of Las Vegas "hooker hawkers"

Wasapeas writes-
This is a visualization of a linux boot sequence where each function is a node and each edge represents a function call, direct branch, or indirect branch. Nodes are laid out using an unweighted force-directed layout algorithm, where each node is simulated as if it were electrically repulsive and had springs between nodes.The little "lobe" on the left is made up the interrupt processing routines (irq vectors, irq_svc, etc). The tail at the top is the bootloader. The main thing in the middle is the linux boot sequence.
The entire graph represents a call chain from the bootloader up until it jumps into userspace to a shell prompt...

Treehugger has an excellent overview of 30 non-standard ways to put a roof over your head in 'tents times.' Above is one of my favorite: a tent disguised as a car. Don't worry: the article is as good as the pun is bad:)
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Music, selected by study participants because it made them feel good and brought them a sense of joy, caused tissue in the inner lining of blood vessels to dilate (or expand) in order to increase blood flow. This healthy response matches what the same researchers found in a 2005 study of laughter. On the other hand, when study volunteers listened to music they perceived as stressful, their blood vessels narrowed, producing a potentially unhealthy response that reduces blood flow..."Joyful Music May Promote Heart Health"
Compared to baseline, the average upper arm blood vessel diameter increased 26 percent after the joyful music phase, while listening to music that caused anxiety narrowed blood vessels by six percent. “I was impressed with the highly significant differences both before and after listening to joyful music as well as between joyful and anxious music,” says Dr. (Michael) Miller...
Most of the participants in the study selected country music as their favorite to evoke joy, according to Dr. Miller, while they said “heavy metal” music made them feel anxious. “You can’t read into this too much, although you could argue that country music is light, spirited, a lot of love songs.” says Dr. Miller, who enjoys rock, classical, jazz and country music.


I am in love with Joonhuyn Kim's flat lightbulb via Hackedgadgets.
flat bulb is designed by korean designer joonhuyn kim. unlike ordinary bulbs its volume is 1/3 smaller, reducing the cost of packaging and transport. its slim shape allows bulbs to be easily stacked and prevents breakage as it does not roll. his work was on display as part of 100% design tokyo.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Arts | Digg this!
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Now we're talking! This is great! Open Source Hardware on New Hampshire Public Radio's "Word of Mouth"!
The Italian design firm Arduino makes one of the hottest circuit boards used by gadget builders today. Since mass production began two years ago, the company has sold about 50,000 units - not bad for a small start-up nestled in the medieval foothills of Milan.But there’s something different about Arduino – their business model. They give everything away. On their Website you can download all the design plans, send them off to a Chinese factory, mass-produce the boards, and sell them yourself. There are no patents. You can pocket the change without paying Arduino a dime. Sounds crazy? It’s part of a new movement called open source hardware.
WIRED Magazine contributing editor Clive Thompson wrote about Arduino and this new trend in technology, and he joins Word of Mouth with more on how open source hardware makes sense as a business model.

Kevin Kelly writes:
This is Tanya Vlach's new eyeball. She lost her real one in a car accident a few years ago. I met Tanya at a film festival recently. During our conversation she said she was looking for help in turning her artificial eye into a eye-cam. You know, a mini web cam inside an eyeball. It would capture live video and stream it to a memory somewhere and also perhaps eventually assist her own vision in real time. She confessed that she was not technologically adept enough to hack it on her own.Eye-Cam Wanted
I'll be joining a number of other internet video creators and network folks at NewTeeVee Live, tomorrow in San Francisco. My session is 4pm, and we'll be talking about Boing Boing tv's first year, and some of the fun stuff we have planned. Tickets are still available if you'd like to attend, and the lineup is great -- lots of solid internetelevision. NewTeeVee kindly included Boing Boing tv in their NewTeeVee Top 10 Breakout Video Stars of 2008.
A police spokesman admitted: "It's hard to believe that the sight of an armless man walking along with a giant TV clamped to his body did not get anyone's attention.""Daring thief steals television despite having no arms"
eBoy, those isometric pixel-stackers extraordinaire, have a new art book out called Pixorama. I haven't seen a copy yet, but it looks like a heavy board book of the various cityscapes they've created in recent years. Here are some more photos of the book.
14 full-color cardboard pages featuring Foobar, London, Assembler, New York, Superbronco, Tokyo, Baltimore and LA. Size closed: 22,5×30 cm (8,86×11,81 inch). Corners rounded.
Speaking of their cityscape posters, they've got a new one of the Baltimore Docks.

Our pal Bonnie at Lucasfilm says, "I thought you both might get a kick out of this. My Darth Vader toast recipes are now on Starwars.com! Oh and I took some fun photos with the toast and toys!"


Naomi Klein's must-read piece in Rolling Stone about the $700 billion Wall Street bailout begins by examining Reuben Jeffery III, the man first tapped to serve as the program's chief investment officer. Snip:
Like Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, he's an alum of Goldman Sachs, having worked on Wall Street for 18 years. And as chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission from 2005 to 2007, he proudly advocated "flexibility" in regulation — a laissez-faire approach that failed to rein in the high-risk trading at the heart of the meltdown.The New Trough (Rolling Stone, thanks Clayton Cubitt, illustration by Illustration by Victor Juhasz)Bankers watching bankers, regulators who don't believe in regulating — that's all standard fare for the Bush crew. What's most striking about Jeffery's résumé, however, is an item omitted when his new job was announced: He served as executive director of Paul Bremer's infamous Coalition Provisional Authority in Baghdad, during the early days of the Iraq War. Part of his job was to hire civilian staff, which made him an integral part of the partisan machine that filled the Green Zone with Young Republicans, investment bankers and Dick Cheney interns. Qualifications weren't a big issue back then, because the staff's main function was to hand over stacks of taxpayer money to private contractors, who were the ones actually running the occupation. It was this nonstop cash conveyor belt that earned the Green Zone a reputation, in the words of one CPA official, as "a free-fraud zone." During Senate hearings last year, when Jeffery was asked what he had learned from his experience at the CPA, he said he thought that contracts should be handed out with more "speed and flexibility" — the same philosophy he cited back when he was in charge of regulating Wall Street traders.
The Bush Administration has since reversed the Jeffery appointment, perhaps thinking better of giving a CPA alum such a central role in the Wall Street bailout. Still the original impulse underscores the many worrying parallels between the administration's approach to the financial crisis and its approach to the Iraq War. Under cover of an emergency, Treasury is rapidly turning into an economic Green Zone, overrun with private companies collecting lucrative contracts. Fittingly, one of the first to line up at the new trough was none other than the law firm of Bracewell & Giuliani — yes, that Giuliani. The firm's chairman, Patrick Oxford, could scarcely conceal his glee over the prospect of cashing in on the bailout. "This one," he told reporters, "is very, very big." At least four times bigger, in fact, than the post-9/11 homeland-security bubble, from which Giuliani and his various outfits have profited so extravagantly. Even bigger, potentially, than the price tag for the Iraq War itself.
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Switthoft's text message bottles via NOTCOT. The maker writes -
Each bottle contains a text message that I have avoided deleting from my selfoan. The messages are printed in braille on used 1/2-inch Ampex audio tape. The end of each message is wound and adhered to the respective leather corks.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Arts | Digg this!
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I've been following Rob's Halloween costume build for a week, he made the most amazing box of chocolates costume from foam, paint, straws and other common items. Nice work!
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I returned from Tokyo on Monday. I gave a talk at the Web Directions East conference. I've never had a simultaneous translation of a presentation before. I hope it went OK. I'll be forever grateful to John Allsopp, Satoshi Kukichi and the rest of the WDE team for inviting me to speak, being incredibly gracious hosts and generally being awesome people. I'll never get tired of traveling to faraway places, where (without fail) the quality of people in this industry inspire, impress and humble me. I feel lucky.
I don't think I'll travel that distance again without the rest of my family.
I'll never forget walking through customs after spending the entire Election Day in the air. CNN was on in the airport lobby. 'Barrack Obama Elected President of the United States' it said. Twenty seconds later, John McCain started his concession speech. Relief after 14 hours of nail-biting anticipation.
I took a lot of photos. I tried packing as much into a few days as possible. I was amazed by the giganticness of the city. I caught a view of the cityscape at night, at the top of the hotel where Lost in Translation was filmed. They wanted a $20 cover charge, so we left.
I loved that every train station in Tokyo has it's own unique short little melody (hear them all). I love how this aids accessibility with audio. I'm thinking we need more unique audible melodies for events that happen on the web or desktop. I was also impressed with the grooved sidewalk path found throughout the entire city, which would direct a blind person from station to station, uninterrupted.
I probably didn't bow enough.
I sang Don't Stop Believing in a karaoke bar in Shinjuku along with friends old and new. I've never sang karaoke before. I had the best doughnut I've had in my life in Harajuku, at Tamagotchi Donuts. I was amazed by the depth of the character culture in Japan. It permeates everything and everyone -- not just for kids, but a part of general communication throughout the city.
I tried the eel (unagi) and 'chicken knuckles', but was less adventurous with the raw horsemeat. I loved the simplicity of the food in Japan. I have a new favorite snack in 'onigiri', a triangle of sushi rice, seaweed, and (in my case) teriyaki-soaked seaweed inside. I'll have to hunt for those here at home.
I learned two Japanese phrases. I should've learned more.
My son and I built the Mechamo Inchworm kit - actually, he built most of it himself, I helped figure out a couple of parts issues and put together some tiny bits. This is a great kit for kids! He's 14, but hasn't built a lot of kits before, and it went really well. He learned a lot of little things from the build, like how to stabilize a nut while tightening a screw. It's also a pretty forgiving design; twice he put something together backwards, but figured it out and was able to take it apart and put it back together correctly - a lot of kits won't let you take things apart.
I was impressed with how nicely it was packaged - the parts were well organized, and there was a parts list, and instructions in both Japanese and English - the English even made sense! It also comes with its own tools; the only thing we added were some containers to hold the tiny parts, and 6 AA batteries.
The directions were really clear and straightforward with lots of pictures. It took him about 4 hours total to build, and the payoff was fantastic! The Inchworm movement is kind of spider-y; it goes forward and backward and can turn 360 degrees. He noticed that you have to point the remote directly at the Inchworm, and that you can control it from quite a distance, maybe 15 feet. I highly recommend it as a kit for a teenager to do on their own, and I think a smart younger kid could build it with help from an adult.
Click "read more" to see the rest of the build.
The Gakken Mechamo Inchworm kit is available through the Maker Shed.
More: Gakken Mechamo Crab build and mod
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Super cute knitted roll of toilet paper via BoJ.
More:

Toilet graffiti embroideries.


Make Spaceships from Aspirin Bottles and Toilet Items.

Toilet Paper Halloween Costume.
"C3 Loops" by Swedish researcher Rikard Lindell is a single-point touch screen that allows users to navigate around a virtual plane playing audio and video clips. Check out the video to watch the interface in action running on a Macbook.
Rikard Lindell via Pete's Sonic Art Research

A big fan of stereoscopic imaging, Matti heavily modded a viewmaster - adding an Arduino board, accelerometer, bluetooth and some buttons. The result is an interactive animation viewer using color-based chromadepth technique for 3D -
The Arduino sends the sensor data and the button states wirelessly via bluetooth to my computer. The information is parsed in Max/MSP, which in turn sends the data as OSC packets to Animata (my favourite software at the moment). Animata then animates everything in real-time and handles the hiding/revealing of different layers.Definitely a unique functionality, the demonstration video sheds some light -
Read on for more details - Mickey Mann
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Check out this matrix-like hexapod robot CNC router cutting a 3D face in high density foam! via LoL.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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'Tech Dorm Gone Wild' WSJ's Andy Jordan hangs out at a dorm at MIT, which houses a coterie of fidgeting student-technologists with a penchant for tinkering, and an eye for changing the world" - if the video doesn't play, visit the site...
'Tech Dorm Gone Wild' WSJ's Andy Jordan hangs out at a dorm at MIT, which houses a coterie of fidgeting student-technologists with a penchant for tinkering, and an eye for changing the world" - if the video doesn't play, visit the site...

This might just be the world's largest pinata. Measuring in at 28.5 meters long, 7.2 meters wide, 18 meters tall, and filled with 8.000 pounds of assorted candy, this "Trojan Horse" pinata took a wrecking ball to crack open. We wonder what the sugar rush would be like from eating all of that candy at once.
via PanAsian Biz

This might just be the world's largest pinata. Measuring in at 28.5 meters long, 7.2 meters wide, 18 meters tall, and filled with 8.000 pounds of assorted candy, this "Trojan Horse" pinata took a wrecking ball to crack open. We wonder what the sugar rush would be like from eating all of that candy at once.
via PanAsian Biz

This "Soil Lamp" by Marieke Staps is made of mud and lights an LED through the natural metabolism of the biological organisms contained within it. We've seen fruit powering electronics before, but building it into something that resembles a commercial product is still pretty far off.
Soil Lamp via Next Nature

This "Soil Lamp" by Marieke Staps is made of mud and lights an LED through the natural metabolism of the biological organisms contained within it. We've seen fruit powering electronics before, but building it into something that resembles a commercial product is still pretty far off.
Soil Lamp via Next Nature
Photo credit: Andres Rodriguez
The set of guidelines and "social contract" proposed in The Company-Customer Pact, suggest that the winning approach brands and customers should follow to manage their business relationships in a sustainable way is one based on trust, trasparence and honesty.
What about you? Do you think The Company-Customer Pact could really be helpful to help companies and customers deal with each other, and engage mutual trust relationships, or do you find these kind of social contracts just a collection of good intentions with no practical application in the way business is carried out?
Give this short set of guidelines a good read and let me know what you think.
Here all the details:
Intro by Daniele Bazzano
We, customers and companies alike, need to trust the people with whom we do business.
Along with open, authentic, communication comes the mutual responsibility to make it work.
As each of us is both customer and employee, we share in the rewards and challenges of candor.
By adopting these five practical measures, we can together realize a fundamental shift in our business relationships.
Use a respectful, conversational voice, avoid scripts and never use corporate doublespeak.
... and use a personal touch.
...and set clear, public expectations in advance for how you will address (and redress) issues.
...so they feel they are being heard and to demonstrate your accountability.
...by speaking plainly, earnestly, and candidly with customers about problems that arise.
Show the respect and kindness to company reps that you'd like shown to you.
...and foster your long-term reputation with the company.
...and give companies the information and time required to competently address issues.
...or through a forum where the company has an opportunity to respond, so it can work with you to solve problems.
...and be open to what they have to say.
By working together in these ways, people build long-term relationships that lead to trust, strong communities, and sustainable business.
We, as companies and customers, support this call for a change.
Get Satisfaction is a company which tries to establish a direct connection between people and companies that fosters problem-solving, promotes sharing, and builds up relationships. A neutral space where companies support customers, exchange ideas, and get feedback about their products and services.
Photo credit: Andres Rodriguez
The set of guidelines and "social contract" proposed in The Company-Customer Pact, suggest that the winning approach brands and customers should follow to manage their business relationships in a sustainable way is one based on trust, trasparence and honesty.
What about you? Do you think The Company-Customer Pact could really be helpful to help companies and customers deal with each other, and engage mutual trust relationships, or do you find these kind of social contracts just a collection of good intentions with no practical application in the way business is carried out?
Give this short set of guidelines a good read and let me know what you think.
Here all the details:
Intro by Daniele Bazzano
We, customers and companies alike, need to trust the people with whom we do business.
Along with open, authentic, communication comes the mutual responsibility to make it work.
As each of us is both customer and employee, we share in the rewards and challenges of candor.
By adopting these five practical measures, we can together realize a fundamental shift in our business relationships.
Use a respectful, conversational voice, avoid scripts and never use corporate doublespeak.
... and use a personal touch.
...and set clear, public expectations in advance for how you will address (and redress) issues.
...so they feel they are being heard and to demonstrate your accountability.
...by speaking plainly, earnestly, and candidly with customers about problems that arise.
Show the respect and kindness to company reps that you'd like shown to you.
...and foster your long-term reputation with the company.
...and give companies the information and time required to competently address issues.
...or through a forum where the company has an opportunity to respond, so it can work with you to solve problems.
...and be open to what they have to say.
By working together in these ways, people build long-term relationships that lead to trust, strong communities, and sustainable business.
We, as companies and customers, support this call for a change.
Get Satisfaction is a company which tries to establish a direct connection between people and companies that fosters problem-solving, promotes sharing, and builds up relationships. A neutral space where companies support customers, exchange ideas, and get feedback about their products and services.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The XRB3 is only the beginning of a much more powerful map-making robot. It looks like they are off to a good start. Check out the link for more pictures and videos of the XRB3.
XRB3 is powered by an AVR ATMEGA324P micro controller on a custom board that I made. Although he is fully autonomous, he is using an XBEE module to communicate with my PC for debugging (and eventually with other robots). Onboard sensory includes: 3 Sharp IR sensors (for wall following and obstacle detection), an SRF-05 sonar sensor and AVRcam.
More about Multipurpose robot: XRB3
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Pololu 3pi Robot&Click=19209

Lukas sent me a link to his new project that encourages people to learn Processing. The idea is to make a B/W monster in Processing and post it on his website. All the monsters are interactive and the source code is available to download. I really like "Blink Eye Monster", and look forward to checking out all the new ones. [Thanks Lukas]
I'm trying to get as much people as possible, to create simple b/w monster in Processing, I'm gonna later use in a short music reactive video.. while the bottom line is to encourage other people to learn Processing by showing the source code..
More about Processing Monsters
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Let's bring back the traveling woodworking shop tour, Popular Mechanics - 1938.
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Michelle @ CRAFT points us to Leo Kempf, who writes:
Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Furniture | Digg this!I made this house for my cat, Olive. She enters through a door in the bottom side and then ascends a ramp, which boosts her to the upper level. The front wall is plexi-glass, the floor is 2.5 inch thick old sheepskin rug, and my wife made some small paintings that hang on the walls. There is also a big cardboard scratching porch. Cats love to scratch and relax on cardboard. The top is removable and the glass slides out for maintenance.
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Charles Platt pointed me to this Times Online article about a fan-poweerd flying car. The British inventor is going to fly it from London to Timbuktu.
“This thing will launch itself without any pilot input,” says Cardozo. “You just open it up and it goes. The more power you put on, the faster you go until you come off the ground [at 35mph]. The wing will basically lock above you [once airborne] and stay there, without weaving, at speeds of up to 80mph.”The flying carFully road-legal - the car passed the government’s single vehicle approval test last month - and designed to run on bioethanol, Cardozo’s Skycar is powered by a modified 140bhp Yamaha R1 superbike engine with a lightweight automatic CVT (continuously variable transmission) gear-box from a snowmobile. It boasts Ferrari-beating acceleration on land, an air speed of up to 80mph and can swap between road and flight modes in minutes.
Sean Ragan writes:
This is a coffee table incorporating a tiled "space invaders" motif. Several years ago tiled space invader sprites began showing up as graffiti in major western cities--Paris, London, New York, etc. It may never be possible to accurately say who was really first, but the British graffiti collective at space-invaders.com has a well-established presence. "Space Invader," of course, is a clever double entendre in the graffiti context; as the subject of the graffiti is a videogame "space invader," so too is the medium of graffiti an invasion of space. My coffee table's not nearly that clever. It does achieve a nice contrast between sense and style through the use of handmade Mexican Talavera tiles. These tiles, like most handmade artifacts, are imprecise and show significant natural lumpiness and variation. The depiction of the precise, orderly, pixellated image of the space invader sprite would be boring if executed in precisely manufactured injection-molded bathroom tiles from the big orange store. The slightly uneven tile heights and lightly meandering grout lines lend a warmth to the image which would otherwise be lacking.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Furniture | Digg this!
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