A set of carrying cases molded with a gun, an axe, or a knife, designed by PinkWolf, and I can't read French well enough to figure out anything else about these slick, screw-you-TSA suitcases. (Via NOTCOUTURE.)
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This video for bike virgins runs through all of the parts and nomenclature of a 10-speed bike. The soundtrack to the video was done by bangin' and clangin' bike parts. It reminded me of that classic Frank Zappa appearance on The Steve Allen Show where Frank and Steve played bicycles.
Bicycle Anatomy for Beginners [via Tim O'Reilly's Twitter feed]
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For those who prefer comics with a bit more depth -
New York Stereoscopic Society 3D Comics NightRead more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Events | Digg this!
Wednesday, November 19, 7 pm
Haft Auditorium, Fashion Institute of Technology
Enter C Building Lobby on 27th street between 7th and 8th AvenuesFree and open to the public
3D PROJECTIONS and live readings by:
Michael Kupperman -- "Hercules vs. Zeus"
Kim Deitch -- "It's 4D!"
R. Sikoryak -- "The Lost Treasure of the 3D!"
Jason Little -- "The Abduction Announcement"
Mick Andreano, Jerry Marks, Joe Pedoto -- 3D Comics and Moral Corruption3D Bake Sale and other fundraising for next year's programs. Some Neat 3D Stuff has been donated for this effort.
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Now that the election was almost two weeks ago, we're winding down newsjunk.com. It was an interesting experiment, but it didn't achieve the biggest goal I had for it, not very many people used it. Not enough to justify continuing to do it.
Brian Francis Slattery's novel Liberation is a magical, riveting poetic story of a post-economic America where the dollar has vanished and slavery has sprung up in the resulting economic chaos. It concerns the adventures of the Slick Six, a gang of fun-loving super-criminals whose unbeatable fighter, Marco, is at sea on a prison-ship when the nation falters. The guards on the ship kill the warden, begin to trade prisoners to slavers for food and fuel, and Marco kills them all, sets the ship free, sails the world, and comes back to what's left of America.
America has dissolved. New York is now the barony of The Aardvark, the crimelord who put Marco away in the first place, as punishment for the Slick Six's incursions against his territories. The Aardvark presides over the capitalization and enforcement of slave-farms across America, and he hunts all of the Slick Six with a mindless, unwavering determination to wreak perfect vengeance.
Marco resolves to find and reunite the Slick Six and to use them as a spearhead in a war on the institution of slavery and on The Aardvark, who reaps a fortune from it. And therein begins the tale, a road-novel that tears back and forth across America, told from the point of view of The Vibe, or fate, which guides the hands of all the dozens of remarkable characters in the story.
Slattery's prose style is complex, poetic, visionary and reeling, a cross between Kerouac and Bradbury, salted with Steinbeck. His people are all magic -- a tribe of stoners called the Americoids, a resurgent Sioux nation led by a visionary war-chief, a hive-like murderous circus, a free-state in Asheville presided over by an American Brahmin-turned-mayor, the prisoners on the liberated ship.
In Marco, we meet one of the great tortured heroes of fiction: an unstoppable badass who is haunted by his past as a child-soldier and who hunts now for peace with his past and a future he can be proud of. There is action and dashing in the story and true love and music and cooking and acrobatics and commerce and economics and crime and nobility. It's a heady stew, a road novel shot through with mysticism and a love of freedom that soars over the pages.
In case it's not clear, I loved this book. I can't wait to read more (I've just ordered Spaceman Blues, Slattery's first novel). This is a book to fall in love with.
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I really like the Amorphic Robot Works, and "Growing, Raining Tree" is one of my favorites pieces. I really hope I have the opportunity to experience their work in person some day.
Like the biological specimen, Growing, Raining Tree responds to elements in its environment and is sensitive to movement around its perimeter. As you approach the pool surrounding the Tree, its limbs slowly come to greet you. Once they reach your location, the branches pull back and begin to drip rhythmically in response to your presence. When the Tree has no visitors, it takes a resting posture that many have described as "willow-like."
More about Growing, Raining Tree by Amorphic Robot Works
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Michael Stephan Fuchs's 2006 novel The Manuscript is just what a technothriller should be: taut, violent, smart, and very, very technical. There's plenty of "technothrillers" where the two key elements -- weapons and computers -- are treated as magic stage-props, able to do anything (or be confounded by anything) that moves the plot along. They're written by writers who confuse "programmers" with "network administrators" and think that 200 years from now, "mainframes" will be important and sexy (rather than ancient and useless).
In The Manuscript, an enormous cast of characters comprising many sysadmins, many gun-freaks, several combat veterans, spooks from a number of agencies, named and unnamed, ten zillion cops, a group of murderous avenging Taoists, and Sir Richard Francis Burton and a group of Andean holy men who have discovered the secret of the universe.
Fuchs does a remarkable job of staying within the confines of what technology actually does (both the guns and the computers) while still putting together an immensely entertaining book filled with likable, bloodthirtsy people doing incredible things while the whole world is on the line.
It's everything a technothriller should be. I don't care much about guns, but I do know an awful lot about computers. Fuchs manages to make the gun geeking every bit as interesting as the computer geeking, which is the definitive sign of really good geeking. Hell, he even makes the philosophy geeking as interesting as the computers (he's got a graduate degree in philosophy and Big Questions are the Maltese Falcon of this book).
Though the technology is out of date (the story revolves around shenanigans on Usenet's alt.* hierarchy), The Manuscript packs several kinds of punch -- it's as if The Da Vinci Code had been written by someone who wasn't an idiot.
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Funnypolynomial framed up the Game of Life kit, nice! via Ladyada.
I've been fascinated by Life since I first read of it in Scientific American, many years ago (October 1970!). The Maker Shed store had a couple of sales so I bought a total of 6 Game of Life boards. I assembled them as a 2x3 panel and used cables to join the edges. I mounted them in a simple frame. I'm moving back to New Zealand soon, this will be my last project in the Bay Area!Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in DIY Projects | Digg this!

Some of you guys must knit, right? (Come out of the closet, boy knitters.) I'm always looking for weird knits - I love this star-nosed mole named Cris (short for Condyluria cristata). It's one of Fawn Pea's Free Pattern Friday shares and it looks like a quick knit that would make a great holiday present. Here's a Wikipedia article about star-nosed moles; they can smell underwater, cool!
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Featuring our own Robert Bruce Thompson, author of the Illustrated Guide to Home Chemistry Experiments (where you can learn how to set up a home chemistry lab and keep your local public officials on their toes):
HOBBY CHEMISTS will tell you that home labs have been the source of some of chemistry's greatest contributions. Charles Goodyear figured out how to vulcanize rubber with the same stove that his wife used to bake the family's bread. Charles Martin Hall discovered the economical electrochemical process for refining aluminum from its ore in a woodshed laboratory near his family home. A plaque outside Sir William Henry Perkin's Cable Street residence in London notes that the chemist "discovered the first aniline dyestuff, March 1856, while working in his home laboratory on this site and went on to found science-based industry."
Even in the 21st century, when home labs tend to be more synonymous with methamphetamine than major discoveries, there are some professional chemists who pursue their science at home. Just 90 miles southeast of Deeb's house, Osamu Shimomura, one of the scientists who shared this year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry, runs a small lab in the basement of his Falmouth, Mass., residence, where he studies bioluminescent materials from animal tissues.
In the Maker Shed

Illustrated Guide to Home Chemistry Experiments - For students, DIY hobbyists, and science buffs, who can no longer get real chemistry sets, this one-of-a-kind guide explains how to set up and use a home chemistry lab, with step-by-step instructions for conducting experiments in basic chemistry. Learn how to smelt copper, purify alcohol, synthesize rayon, test for drugs and poisons, and much more. The book includes lessons on how to equip your home chemistry lab, master laboratory skills, and work safely in your lab, along with 17 hands-on chapters that include multiple laboratory sessions.
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"Dumb" eco-questions you were afraid to ask. New Scientist offers the definitive guide to everything you wanted to know about being green but were too embarrassed to ask...
If I switch the light on and off every time I enter and leave a room, does this use more energy than leaving it on all evening?Read more @ New Scientist...
Switching the light on and off does saves energy, but there is a catch. Every time you flip the switch, the bulb takes a jolt of electricity, which shortens its life. Studies by the Electric Power Research Institute in Palo Alto, California, found that turning low-energy compact fluorescent bulbs on and off at frequent intervals can shorten their lifespan by as much as 75 per cent. The institute's director of energy utilisation, Tom Reddoch, suggests leaving energy-saving bulbs on if you will be out of the room for less than 15 minutes.

CRAFT 09 - Recycled, repurposed, and reused materials are the focus of the projects in this issue, which will also feature a DIY holiday gift guide. Create cool crafts and save the planet at the same time! Our November issue focuses on all things green: Eco-friendly projects, features on crafters and companies that promote environmentally friendly practices, and just in time for the holiday frenzy, an inspiring gallery of DIY gifts - get the latest CRAFT here!

Ralf Ackermann sent us a tip on using the Myvu Crystal headset in conjunction with a wearable computer. The Myvu glasses were designed to block out the rest of the world for private iPod video watching, but its VGA resolution and device compatibility makes it pretty suitable for tearing apart.
The consumer myvu crystal HMD (sold as a nice though still somewhat "socially unacceptable" 2 eyepiece video output device for the ipod and other devices generating a PAL/NTSC signal can be modified into a much smaller 1 eyepiece version. This one works very well with a multitude of devices like a Parallax propeller, a Nokia N95 via TV out or a Archos PMA 430. It is thus well suited as the core of "another wearable computer".For this purpose it might also be combined with the iphone / ipod touch
Xbee IO extension described earlier this week.
Ralf's project is still a work in progress, but it's a reminder that most of the hardware required for a wearable is now commonly available. Considering most of us already carry a sufficient computer (iPhone, N95, G1, etc.) around with us all the time anyway, it's only a matter of time before a HMD design is made cool enough to dodge the social stigma.
Myvu Crystal HMD Modification (Flickr Photo Set)
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My supply of decent roasted coffee is at dangerously low levels, so my daughter and I spent a short time roasting coffee today. There are some great books and online resources for coffee roasting, but in a nutshell, here's my simple method (purists will cringe; you can be much more precise about all of this. I overroasted mine a bit today):
I used a hand-cranked stovetop popcorn popper, a stove (I roast on the side burner of my gas grill to keep the smoke out of the house), a high-temperature thermometer (such as the thermocouple on a multimeter), green coffee beans, and a colander.

That's it. If you're roasting beans for drip, French Press, or vacuum pot enjoy your newly roasted coffee right away. If you're making an espresso blend, wait an agonizing two or three days for the CO2 levels to drop, otherwise you'll have some fairly fizzy crema to contend with.
It makes pretty good economical sense if you exclude the cost of your own labor (this qualifies for a hobby "exemption" in my mind!). I compare $4.80/lb. green beans favorably against $15/lb. roasted beans.
It's also an eminently hackable pursuit. Popular non-commercial methods include converted air-poppers, the heatgun/dogbowl combo, and grill rotisseries.
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