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Read more of this story at Slashdot.
1. In our world we call it net neutrality. It means that all packets are treated equally on the Internet.
5. You don't want your Internet Service Provider to also provide your cable TV because they might screw around with BitTorrent to keep you from getting your entertainment on the net, protecting their revenue from cable TV. So they make a promise to keep the two functions separate, and there's a scandal every time they fail to.
This week on the CRAFT Blog we saw:
Lasercut Stretchy Conductive Fabric Traces
Removing Firescale/Patina from Copper

CRAFT Demo Schedule for Maker Faire Bay Area


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Read more of this story at Slashdot.

[Photo from Connors934 on Flickr]
This speaker project was part of the electricity and electronics class at DHS. The parts were mostly junk except for the magnet wire. We made headphones from bottle caps, speakers from shipping tubes, lights, pvc, coffee cups and italian ice cups. Packing tape or regular adhesive tape works well for the membrane attach the coil of magnet wire directly to the membrane and mount the magnet a bit away from it.
When the coil is charged by the audio circuit, the coil either attracts or repels the magnet. We used an old stereo and drive the home made speakers off the speaker outputs, which was moderately successful, because some kids found a little too much joy from destroying the speaker by turning the volume way up until the wire heated through the plastic cone material. An old radio, cd player or mp3 player might be a better device to drive them from because of the decreased output from the headphone jacks.
The magnets we started with were mostly ceramic disks that I bought for the mendocino motor project. They turn out to be not very powerful. The rare earth magnets in hard drives, or the ones found in busted speakers work much better.

[Photo from Connors934 on Flickr]
These speakers did work, but they were anything but high fidelity. The real value in the project is seeing and showing kids that it can be done. Kids should see that they can make their own stuff like speakers rather than believe that everything comes from factories. A number of the students in the class went on to study engineering in college, others are just more curious as they move through the world.
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There's still time to start making or just watch this week's Weekend Project: Mooftronic Mini Synth. You can view the video here, or subscribe in iTunes to get all our Weekend Projects and PDFs delivered each week.

(Image: Jimmie's ugly camera, from connors934 on Flickr)

* "¡Esta revolución será tuiteada!," they're saying -- "This revolution will be tweeted." Massive demonstrations are taking place in Guatemala today, organized, amplified, and documented by social media networks -- namely, Ustream, Twitter, and Facebook.
* The independent Guatemalan online media organization Libertopolis is streaming live video of the massive pro- and anti-government demonstrations taking place in Guatemala. The Guatemalan newspaper Prensa Libre also has a live video stream (both on Ustream.tv). All of this media is in Spanish.
* Twitter is exploding with on-the-scene reports. As of 9am PT, some 5,000 10am PT, 50,000 people gathered in the Plaza Italia area of the capital (photo/via washwash, another here.) Most of the demonstrators wore white to symbolize peace.
* Where to find on-the-scene reports via twitter: El Periodico, Noticias Guatemala, Prensa Libre. Also, follow #escandalogt. Some Guatemalan twitterers were saying last night they planned to print out "V for Vendetta" masks and wear them en masse to the demonstrations today. Organizers on Twitter urged all who planned to participate to report anomalies or rights abuses by authorities, and observe cautionary guidelines to avoid violence.
* Online reports are coming in that governors, under duress from the state, have used public funds to ship busloads of primarily poor, indigenous citizens from the interior and north of the country to participate in government-planned pro-Colom demonstrations. Twitterers on the scene say the government-organized, pro-Colom demonstrations number about 2,500 participants as of 10am PT and include a patriotic musical performance.
* Last night, the Constitutional Court of Guatemala ruled that law enforcement must not take sides in today's demonstrations, and must preserve and uphold the citizens' right to free expression. Police in the capital are on "maximum alert" today.
* President Colom: "They don't know who they're messing with."
* Update, 1230pm PT: The demonstrations ended peacefully. Organizers collected approximately 30,000 signatures on-site, demanding Guatemalan president Álvaro Colom temporarily step down so that a judicial inquiry into his alleged involvement in the assassination of attorney Rodrigo Rosenberg may proceed without interference. Many who texted updates from the streets spoke of a moment during the anti-Colom demonstration when the entire crowd spontaneously sang Guatemala's national anthem in unison. "Over 50,000 people singing the anthem was epic," tweeted one participant.
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Earlier this year, I had the privilege of participating in the closing panel at the Convention on Modern Liberty with Billy Bragg, Lisa Appignanesi, Feargal Sharkey, Paul Gilroy and Henry Porter. The Convention was a whole-day event in which activists, scholars, Parliamentarians, regulators, teachers, cryptographers and others. On the closing panel, we were asked to give closing thoughts on the event -- I talked about the fact that British authoritarians have promised us security in exchange for taking away our liberty, but have not delivered; we've lost our freedom and been made less secure.
The Convention's just uploaded the videos from the event, and I really enjoyed watching it from the other side of the stage, especially Billy Bragg's talk. The last question -- "What has moved our rights forward?" -- was especially good.
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[Photo from Feurig on Flickr]

[Image from Feurig on Flickr]

Photo from Feurig on Flickr
Looks like we've got a nice BassMod project coming up in the MAKE Flickr pool. Stay tuned for more!
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Thanks for having me aboard these past two weeks, engaging with me so honestly and provocatively, and for quickly scrolling past my posts if they just strayed too far from what it is you know and love about BoingBoing. The beauty of guest bloggers is that we are temporary. And no matter how combative we get in these spaces, sometimes it's good to remember we're all on the same side.
I do hope I get to meet a lot of the people I engaged with in the comments sections, here. I'll be touring - both for my Life Inc book and, more importantly, to promote ideas for DIY commerce. I really do believe the BoingBoing ethos of open source and cyberpunk (make) culture dovetail perfectly with those of complementary currencies, peer-to-peer lending, and other non-outsourced finance. And I look forward to taking what I've learned into the field and into the media.
There's two more excerpts coming up to finish the serialization on BB, too - this Monday and next.
For those of you who may want to catch up or meet up, here's where I'll be the next few weeks. You can always find out where I'm going to be via http://rushkoff.com - and I'll be on the MediaSquat via WFMU every week, as well, so call in. Please don't be strangers.
Thanks again. Your humble but happy mutant,
Douglas
Upcoming gigs:
NY: May 26th:
Reading in Irvington, 8pm-9pm
Chutney Masala
4 West Main Street in Irvington, NY
NY: May 31st: Comp Currency panel, 1-5PM St. Marks Church 2nd Ave & 10th St
Boston: June 2. Boston Public Library, book reading, 6pm 700 Boylston St.
NY: June 7th: Life Inc. Book Party, open to public Comfort Restaurant 583 Warburton Ave, Hasting-on-Hudson, NY 10706
SF: June 9th: Booksmith, reading and signing, 7pm - 8pm PST 1644 Haight St,
Seattle, June 10th: HL2.com, Seattle talk and signing, 7pm PST www.hl2.com/
Redmond: June 11th: Lecture at Microsoft, 10:30 am - 11:30 am PST
NY: June 16th McNally Jackson Books, book reading and signing, 7pm - 8pm 52 Prince Street,
NY: June 18th: Blue Stockings, book party and talk, 7pm 172 Allen St
NY: June 29th: Personal Democracy Forum www.personaldemocracy.com/

In Make: Talk 08, the conversation circled briefly around to the New Alchemy Institute or NAI, an ambitious center dedicated to developing sustainable living techniques. In college, I recall going on a trip to the institute. Unfortunately, those were the days of analog, so alas, no pictures, video or blog entries to look back upon, geeze, no notebook either...
TreeHugger has a review of A Safe and Sustainable World by Nancy Jack Todd about the NAI, which had a run from 1971 to 1991.
The story of the growth and groundbreaking research and development of the group is compelling, but ultimately plays a secondary role to their discovery and execution of innovative ways to sustain the human population in harmony with the natural world.Perhaps the most important lesson in the book regarding ecological design is simply that "It works!" Their early experiences farming vegetables and fish to building windmills led to the consolidation of all of their ecological design experience into the construction of two "Arks" -- large greenhouse-like shelters built to sustain those living inside (including their shelter, food and energy needs) independent of the power grid or the rest of the world.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
I've got a new way to view Twitter these days, looking at the collected tweets of people who work at two companies: The NY Times and at Twitter itself. I hoped to see cohesion, discussion between people working on projects together. Not yet.
Jason sez, "The Swedish artist Montt Mardié thought The Pirate Bay needed an theme song, an anthem. So he created one! We like it a lot and hope you like it too. You can download the torrent here, and watch the video as well. We also got the audio files so all you TPB fans can make your own version, your own remix! It would also be cool if you did your own version of the video and post as a video response on youtube. As Montt Mardié put it: 'To show the world, that we're all The Pirate Bay...'"
WE'RE ALL THE PIRATE BAY
(Thanks, Jason!)
Woman cuffed for not holding escalator handrail (Thanks, Roy!)Bela Kosoian, a 38-year-old mother of two, says when she didn't hold the handrail Wednesday she was cuffed, dragged into a small holding cell and fined.
"It was horrible, disgusting behaviour [by police]," said Ms. Kosoian, a 38-year-old student of international law. "I did nothing wrong. They should go find the guys who stole my tires off the balcony."
Ms. Kosoian, who studies at the Université du Québec à Montreal, was riding an escalator down to catch a 5:30 p.m. subway from the suburb of Laval to an evening class downtown when she started rifling through her backpack looking for a fare.
Ms. Kosoian, who grew up in Georgia when it was still part of the Soviet Union, says she didn't catch the officer's instruction to hold the rail when he first approached.
When he told her again to hang on, she says she replied, "I don't have three hands." Besides, she had been sick and feared catching a new bug.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Douglas Rushkoff is a guest blogger.
With nine months since the beginning of the meltdown to think about it, The New York Times Magazine could have come up with a more original and insightful set of articles for their Money Issue, entitled "Dilemmas of Debt." A cover feature on Suze Orman (expertly executed by Sue Dominus, but nonetheless a subject who has been amply covered by everyone else), the obligatory piece on whether China will still bankroll us, an interesting but unrelated look at the way credit cards gather information about us to model our behaviors and, perhaps worst of all, a piece by a NYTimes economics reporter (who really should have known better) about how he ended up buying a house he couldn't afford (not along with alimony) in order to have room for his teenage sons when they visited, and ended up taking on a completely ridiculous loan product and now hasn't made payments in eight months so he can qualify for government-sponsored restructuring.
It's not that the irony of an economics reporter - "the chief eyes and ears on the Federal Reserve for the past six years" - falling prey to the very phenomena he was reporting on was lost on the Times; that's what the article was about. Rather, it's the way the magazine has chosen to embrace the values of the population it failed: instead of reporting accurately on what happened while it was happening, the magazine (and the papers') reporters simply excuse everyone's short-sighted greed by admitting they did it themselves. Hell, if it can happen to the economics guy at the Times, then it really is excusable, and the government should restructure or repackage and let us stay in these giant houses we couldn't afford. At the expense of those who made smarter, non-NY decisions.
But the missed opportunity here was that by dedicating an entire issue to Dilemmas of Debt, the NYTimes put itself in a position to explain debt. To help people understand what really happened, and to think about it more deeply. They could have done a piece on central bank-issued currency, on the bias of currency, on the workings of a debt-driven economy, or on the hundreds of alternative value-driven currencies now on the horizon. They could have looked at how debt itself functions, or how it influences societies who use it as the basis for their economy. They could have at least help readers consider the possibility that debt itself is not a pre-existing condition of the universe. It is an invention.
And while the Times is choosing to use its pages to make New Yorkers feel a bit better about their bad decisions, Rupert Murdoch is reconfiguring the Wall Street Journal to become the new paper of record. While I don't relish the idea of the creator of FoxNews bringing us the next respected national paper, so far the Journal's coverage of debt, the money supply, and the landscape of central-bank-dominated commerce and lending has been more penetrating and dimensionalized than that of the NYTimes.
Maybe human-based stories about real people having problems have been judged more readable and subscriber-friendly (or certainly advertiser-friendly) in these troubled days for print publications. But by competing with Parade and the NYPost instead of the Wall Street Journal or New York Review of Books, the NYTimes magazine may have entered a race to the bottom that leads exactly there.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

[Photo from 4volt.com]
Over the past few months I've been watching the amazing and festive work by Jeremy at 4volt.com. Today's find was a diy laser cut caliper.
Here are plans for a simple caliper, handy to have around the shop for measuring thickness and diameters. Anytime I can build something that helps me build something else I am always pleased.The plans should be as accurate as your cutter or printer is, I actually used this project as a collaboration for my laser.
Don't have a laser? Then print your own!
If you don't have a laser you can print the PDF and glue the paper down to any flat material and cut it by hand.

[Photo from 4volt.com]
Another clever idea is his geek coins, since laser cut acrylic seems to be the currency of the early adopter realm these days:
He writes in is concise explanation:
...I posted about a coin that I laser engraved and enhanced with some paint, but did not post step by step instructions. With a recent project for Midnight Research Labs, I had a chance to take some more pictures.I engraved the coin in the regular way and then painted over the whole sheet with a standard acrylic spray-paint.
His technique of bringing out the etching on the acrylic is a handy process. I tried to get my phone's barcode scanner to read the QR chip, but the photo was not clear enough.
The first project I noticed from 4volt was the incredible open source Jansen walker which was posted into the MAKE Flickr pool. Gareth beat me to it, but here is a little more of a great project:
4volt Jansen Walker Beta 1 from a3o Studios on Vimeo.
From the MAKE Flickr pool
The Jansen Walker is based on the work of Theo Jansen who did an excellent Ted Talk. This mechanism is also the basis for the Cajun Crawler.
Gareth mentioned this project and the Strandbeest it is inspired by on MAKE: Talk. Plans for the Jansen walker have been recently updated on the 4volt site.
By keeping an ongoing record of his work, Jeremy is helping his own project development and keeping us a part of his community of making. Thanks for sharing, Jeremy, keep up the inspiration!
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The Record Organ is an air compressor flute organ built by Hagai Cohen and prof. Mel Rosenberg. The organ uses single tone soprano recorders as the pipes.
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Things have got so bad that Rupert Murdoch has tasked a team with finding a way of charging for News Corp content. This is the "make the bastards pay" school of thought. Another group of fantasists speculate about ways of extorting money from Google, which they portray as a parasitic feeder on their hallowed produce. And recently a few desperadoes have made the pilgrimage to Capitol Hill seeking legislative assistance and/or federal bailouts for newspapersVolume and diversity: the future's bright for news onlineIt's difficult to keep one's head when all about one people are losing theirs, but let us have a go. First of all, some historical perspective might help. When broadcast radio arrived in the US in the 1920s, nobody could figure out a business model for it. How could one generate revenue from something that could be listened to by anyone for free? Dozens of companies were founded to exploit the new medium, and most of them folded. The problem was solved by a detergent manufacturer named Procter & Gamble, which came up with the idea of sponsoring dramatic serials: the soap opera - and the mass market - was born.
The moral is simple: eventually someone will figure out a business model that works for online news. But it may take some time, and lots of outfits will fall by the wayside in the meantime. That's capitalism for you.
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@mirroredpool: What borders to teens place of social networking sites and education? How would they react to using an SNS to do class work?answers to questions from Twitter on teen practices@annejonas: i'm curious if they want schools involved in social networks or if they like it as a social space outside the realm of formal edu.
This is messy. Many teens have ZERO interest in interacting with teachers on social network sites, but there are also quite a few who are interested in interacting with SOME teachers there. Still, this is primarily a social space and their interactions with teachers are primarily to get more general advice and help. In some ways, its biggest asset in the classroom is the way in which its not a classroom tool and not loaded this way. Given that teens don't Friend all of their classmates, there are major issues in terms of using this for groupwork because of boundary issues.
@shcdean: What future do they see for FB or Twitter.
They don't use Twitter. When asked, teens always say that they'll use their preferred social network site (or social media service) FOREVER as a sign of their passion for it now. If they expect that they'll "grow out of it", it's a sign that the service is waning among that group at this very moment. So they're not a good predictor of their own future usage.
@lazygal: Do they really care about/use school library websites? Twitter? Pageflakes? Libguides? or only if teacher insists?
Nope, they don't. All but Twitter are categorized as school tools and are only used when absolutely necessary and Google won't suffice.
Jackie Flaten says
Backstory: A North Dakota State University student newspaper editor thought it would be funny to promote Zap, N.D., a teeny tiny town smack dab in the middle of nowhere, as an ideal alternative to the customary spring break site of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. When the AP picked up his article, things got out of hand - high school and college students descended en masse, beer flowed freely and things pretty much went downhill from there.The "Zap-in" happened a couple months before Woodstock -- one of the originators mused, 15 years later, perhaps something was "in the air, calling the tribes..."
North Dakota native Chris Breitling produced a documentary while he was a film student -- the film, Zap Revisited, is now available for the first time on DVD in commemoration of the 40th anniversary.
The YouTube link shows a two-minute clip of the student documentary, Zap Revisited, which looks at this event, originators and small-town quirky ND.
From the Zap Revisited Web site:
In the spring of 1969 an estimated 3,000 young people descended on the tiny prairie town of Zap, N.D., for a spring break blow-out. What started as an off-beat idea for a party ended with National Guard troops expelling the revelers from Zap and the nearby towns of Beulah and Hazen, creating a national media sensation.High times & hijinks on the High Plains circa 1969Zap Revisited, a documentary by West Fargo, N.D., native Chris Breitling recalls the strange-but-true story of the "Zip to Zap", aka the "Zap-In" through the memories of people who took part in this uniquely infamous episode of North Dakota history. Breitling produced Zap Revisited as a graduate film student while at Columbia College in the early 1990s.
In conjunction with the 40th anniversary, Outcast Studios is making this DVD available to anyone interested in this unlikely High Plains tale set in the tumultuous spring of 1969.
This week's episode of Fretboard Journal's BlogTalkRadio show (a talk radio show for music and guitar geeks) has two of the Cheap Suit Serenaders
.
This week's episode features two multi-instrumentalists from the acclaimed Cheap Suit Serenders, Al Dodge and Robert Armstrong. We hear about working with R. Crumb, the early days of the Cheap Suit Serenaders, just how they got started playing old-time music and their instrument collections.Fretboard Journal Talk Radio: The Cheap Suit Serenaders

So how do you find codeshares? First, find your desired flight number and punch it into a flight tracking service like Flight Stats. Look for a section breaking out specific codeshares and the flight numbers associated with the other airlines. Then, go to each airline listed and search for the codeshared flight number to compare the price. Once you've found the lowest fare, book it and start packing!Use Codeshares To Find Cheap Summer Flights Abroad
A personal best is always a major victory:There's more, click through.
It doesn't matter if they finish first, third, ninth, thirty-eigth, or dead last. If they swam the event faster than they've ever swum the event before, it's a victory. This is still true if they've never swum it before.Cheer for your children:
Do not yell at them. Do not tell them that they're swimming poorly. Never, ever, ever ask them what the hell they thought they were doing, particularly in the first ten seconds after they get out of the water. You're paying good money to put them on a swim team that has actual coaches who can handle all of the criticism (and who know more about how to swim and how to coach than you do). You're there to encourage them, not discourage them.Cheer for other people's children:
If you've got a pair of lungs that can rupture eardrums at fifty feet, why is it that I only hear you during a few heats? Your kid is on a team. Support the team. If you don't know anyone who is swimming in a heat, cheer for everyone. It's a hard sport, and a little support makes everyone feel better.Be a role-model for sportsmanship:
And when I say that, I'm talking about the good kind of role-model. Most swim meets are like most cereal box contests: many will enter, few will win. Your kids are going to get a lot of practice at not winning events. Teach them to show as much grace and class when they don't win that they do when they win.
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Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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