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Graham writes: "Unfortunately, he won’t get to talk. He died in a plane crash yesterday."“Mike Connell set-up the alternate email and communications system for the White House. He was responsible for creating the system that hosted the infamous GWB43.com accounts that Karl Rove and others used. When asked by Congress to provide these emails, the White House said that they were destroyed. But in reality, what Connell is alleged to have done is move these files to other servers after having allegedly scrubbed the files from all “known” Karl Rove accounts.
In addition, I have reason to believe that the alternate accounts were used to communicate with US Attorneys involved in political prosecutions, like that of Don Siegelman. This is what I have been working on to prove for over a year. In fact, it was through following the Siegelman-Rove trail that I found evidence leading to Connell. That is how I became aware of him. Mike was getting ready to talk. He was frightened.”
UPDATE: A curious press release: "Bush Insider Who Planned To Tell All Killed In Plane Crash: Non-Profit Demands Full Federal Investigation" (Thanks, Adam!)
(Via Why, That's Delightful)
It occurred to me that one way to measure the worth of a blogger is how much intelligence do they add or subtract to or from the universe. Sometimes it seems some bloggers just subtract, that when they post, others must negate the damage they do. One of their blog posts is an environmental disaster, like an oil spill or a nuclear accident.
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Tis the season for X Of The Year awards.

Scientists Hack Cellphone to Analyze Blood, Detect Disease, Help Developing Nations @ Wired...
A new MacGyver-esque cellphone hack could bring cheap, on-the-spot disease detection to even the most remote villages on the planet. Using only an LED, plastic light filter and some wires, scientists at UCLA have modded a cellphone into a portable blood tester capable of detecting HIV, malaria and other illnesses.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Cellphones | Digg this!
Blood tests today require either refrigerator-sized machines that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars or a trained technician who manually identifies and counts cells under a microscope. These systems are slow, expensive and require dedicated labs to function. And soon they could be a thing of the past.
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Mother Earth News has plans for building a built-in bed. I have yet to find a good set of plans for the famed Murphy bed; has anybody else?
Build one of these, put it somewhere semi-private in your home, and rent it to a community-minded friend (or random Craigslister) to decrease your energy footprint by increasing your denominator for home energy use. It's up to you whether you make "help on projects" a condition of the rental:)
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One of the great things about Maker Faire is the opportunity to meet clever people and their fascinating projects. Often you have a conversation with a person who is highly skilled in an area you have never really considered before. This was the case when I met up with Jerry Etheridge of the North Texas Battle Group.
The idea behind the battles is that each ship is a 1:144 scale model of ships built prior to 1945. The hulls are made of balsa sheet, and each ship is armed with a CO2 powered gun firing ball bearings at each other. You fire onto the other ship until somebody gets wet. Since they run in fresh water, they don't worry too much about motors and other electronics getting damaged. When you sink, somebody rows out and grabs your superstructure and recovers the vessel, you patch up your holes, and go out to battle again.
The North Texas Battle Group has a wealth of information on their site. You may find that there is a group doing similar work near you. There seems to be a decent collection of battle ship videos on Youtube.
Has somebody sunk your battleship? Have you built, battled or seen a battle in miniature? How can you use your students' and your maker skills to help understand other subjects like history, science, language, math or art and music? Add your ideas to the comments, and contribute your photos and video to the Make Flickr pool.
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The holidays are quickly approaching, but it's not too late to give a year subscription to MAKE or a gift certificate to the Maker Shed store. We all know how makers love robots, so why not make a papercraft robot to personally deliver the gift of making?
A quick search for "papercraft robot" will turn up a number of results, but I found a huge stash of really great ones on a Japanese site that I'm completely unable to read. The site is linked below. If you don't read Japanese, just follow anything that looks like a link until you find a PDF.
If you want to do something custom, you can find a model shape that you like and Photoshop a different skin onto it. Otherwise, just print it out on heavy weight paper and get to work with scissors and glue. I ended up using the one above without alteration, and I finished it by giving him a MAKE package to deliver. You can resize and cut this illustration from one of the free downloadable MAKE gift cards.
Only the robot needs to know that you waited until the last minute to do your gift shopping. The second law ensures that your secret will be kept safe.
Some Awesome Papercraft Robots
MAKE Gift Subscription
Maker Shed Gift Certificate
Downloadable MAKE Cards
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Landon Fuller put together a secret message passing system that exploits a feature of DNS servers. It's based on a hack first conceived by Dan Kaminsky, which allows you to set a single bit of data by caching a wildcard zone on a cache server:
In each DNS query, 7 bits are reserved for a number of flags, one of which is the Recursion Desired (RD) flag. If set to 0, the queried DNS server will not attempt to recurse -- it will only provide answers from its cache.
Combine this with a wildcard zone and it's possible to signal bits (RD on), and read them (RD off). To set a bit to 1 the sender issues a query with the RD bit on. The wildcard zone resolves all requests, including this query. The receiver then issues a query for the same hostname, with the RD bit off. If the bit is 1, the query will return a valid record. If the bit is 0, no record will be returned.
To send the message, the sender and receiver agree on a DNS server and a big list of secret words. A unique hostname is generated for each word in the list, each of which is used to set one bit of data in a remote DNS server. The receiver can come along at a later date and extract the message from the dead drop by querying those same names. It's a pretty inefficient way to transfer data, but who ever said secret spy messages needed to be efficient?
You can download Landon's program from his site. If you want to play with it, I'd recommend either just testing it with a short message or two, or using your own server. As you can imagine, it's a bit of a resource hog, since it requires a full lookup just to communicate a single bit.
The DNS Dead Drop
Attacking Distributed Systems: The DNS Case Study (PDF)
It's been a fantastic year, thanks to you folks. It's been an especially great year for me, writing-wise. The UK edition of Little Brother, my first young adult novel, is selling briskly, and the US edition is doing spectacularly, having just gone on to an eighth hardcover printing (the hardcover's selling so well that my publisher's delayed the paperback for a year!). The book's made just about everyone's best-of lists for 2008: the New York Times, the LA Times, the Washington Post, the Globe and Mail, the National Post, Publishers Weekly, Kirkus Review, School Library Journal, Amazon Editors' Picks, Amazon top teen books, Richie's Picks, Book Sense, VOYA, TeenReads, Texas Library Association, io9 -- not to mention a whopping haul of awards and award-nominations: Emperor Norton Award, ALA's YALSA Award, Cybils Award, Prometheus Award, Ontario Library Association White Pine Award, the ALA Printz Award and the Nebula Award! My agents are doing some serious talking with a film studio (though nothing's ever final until it's signed and delivered), and there are more overseas publishers signing up every month to do their own editions.
Best of all is all the fan-stuff -- videos, art, readings, translations, adaptations... All the stuff that takes advantage of the Creative Commons license to remake Little Brother to better suit the readers (and man, do I get awesome email from readers, from security researchers at Microsoft to activist students in rural schools). And of course, I was floored by the generosity of the donors who sent hundreds of copies of the book to libraries, schools, halfway houses, and shelters as a way of saying thanks for the CC license.
Who the hell knows what'll happen in 2009? It's definitely the most uncertain new year I can remember. One thing I'm sure of, though, is that whatever happens, we'll all figure it out together, that the Internet will make it possible for us to bug-in and help each other here at home, rather than heading for a defensive position in the hills. Crappy economies are often the home of wonderful Bohemias. Two recessions ago, I dropped out of school to become a computer programmer. In the last one, I quit the company I'd co-founded and went to work for the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Now that I'm a parent -- and now that I'm a little older -- I feel the risk a lot more keenly than I did then. But I just keep on remembering that we live in the best time in the history of the world to have a worst time: the time when collective action is cheaper and easier than ever, the time when more information and better access to tools, ideas and communities are at our fingertips than they've ever been.
Have a fantastic holiday. Remind the people who matter to you of that fact. Ring in the new year with a big grin, and I'll see you all in 2009.
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Last year, after giving it much thought, I decided to give out an award that I called, unoriginally, Blogger of the Year. I felt entitled to do so because I am a blogger, like millions of other people.
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Today, on my In Bed podcast, I interview Wendy Chapkis, author of Dying to Get High: Marijuana as Medicine.
Wendy and her co-author Richard Webb conducted extensive interviews with members of WAMM (The Wo/Men's Alliance for Medical Marijuana) - the patient collective that exemplifies the "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need" ethos when it comes to pot medicine.
In this excerpt, Wendy talks a bit about how boring ole' cannabis became demon "mari-juana," in D.E.A. history.
Listen to an excerpt
Read an introduction to Dying to Get High: Marijuana as Medicine (PDF).
(Susie Bright is a guest blogger)
Machine Project Electron Wranglers- Synthesizer workshop from machine project on Vimeo.
Looking for something MAKE-ish to do in Los Angeles? My friend and hero Mark Allen will be teaching an Introduction to Soldering / Build Your Own Synth Workshop on December 20th from 3pm - 5pm at Machine Project (the awesomest place in LA). $50 covers the class and materials ($40 for Machine Project members), and you'll end up with your own working primitive synthesizer at the end. Mark is an excellent teacher, so you're sure to learn a lot, too.
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Lifehacker has figured out which DIY projects people viewed most on their site over the last year. Here's video of my favorite:
And here's the full top 10:
Check out the article for links to the above, their all-time most-popular DIY projects, and to find out what a "listicle" is!
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