Monday, 24 October 2011

Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra (12 of 78)


COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra by Khan Academy. Copyright 2011 by Khan Academy.
Share with a a friend! Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0


Today’s Algebra lesson (in video) from the Khan Academy is:

Slope and Y-intercept Intuition

To view other Khan Academy videos, you can find them at their website here.

Enjoy!

-Susan Danziger
Founder, DailyLit
@susandanziger, @dailylit

P.S. Note that given the length of these lessons, you may want to adjust your settings to receive one or two lessons a week.





Question of the Week: Which book's movie adaptation improved on or was comparable to the original book? Click here to share.




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No I'm Not Going To Law School: Disrupting Law Schools

By at 5:16 pm Sunday, Oct 16


Derek Slater is my former colleague at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, now serving as a policy analyst at Google. He's just published a barn-burning essay called "#noimnotgoingtolawschool: Or, Why I Love Legal Clinics as well as Lawyers and Law Professors That See Their Primary Job As Helping Students Reach Their Goals, Or, Disrupting Law Schools." Slater indicts the legal education industry as a system that produces debt-ridden, half-trained half-lawyers who have to go on to firms in order to actually learn to practice law. He calls for a refactoring of the legal education system around legal clinics, which, he says, will prepare lawyers to actually help clients.

If the thing you want to have an impact on is politics and/or the legal system:

then I’d still recommend you probably be an engineer, and that you direct your engineering talents to politics.

In the alternative: I would recommend you focus on where you have passionate beliefs, and surround yourself with really smart engineers and really smart lawyers. I would apprentice with those types of people, and show a willingness to get your hands dirty and work hard toward what they’re passionate about...

The first model I’d look at is how colleges are training really amazing software engineers. There is nothing inherently special about the people who are software engineers that make them better or more able to change the world. They’re not inherently smarter than lawyers. They are not unique or special snowflakes either.

They have just been trained better. The difference is that they have been trained to be immediately effective in the world. They are trained in ways that allow them to contribute to the companies they join right out of the gate. They know how to code.

Law students are currently the equivalent of someone asking Google or Facebook for a job, and saying “I don’t know how to code, but I know a lot of theory about the Web and I’ve looked at a ton of websites. I’m really smart. So hire me and teach me how to code, ok?”

(Image: UC Berkeley Law School Quote, a Creative Commons Attribution (2.0) image from taylar's photostream)

#noimnotgoingtolawschool [docs.google.com] Tags: , ,

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MC Frontalot's Critical Hit (BB Exclusive!)

By at 6:35 am Monday, Oct 17

We're honored to be first to present the video for MC Frontalot's Critical Hit, starring Brian Posehn alongside the nerdcore rapper. The track's from Frontalot's latest album, Solved, which is available from iTunes and Amazon for less than a tenner. You can download the single and read the lyrics at the official website.

Critical Hit's video is the first of four funded by Kickstarter campaigns from earlier this year. You can see MC Frontalot in person later this fall, as he's on tour in the southern and eastern US from Oct 21-Nov 13. [Video Link]


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Enthusiasm for tablets grows in government

By at 2:27 am Monday, Oct 17

Government workers are dying to get their hands on tablet computers, according to documents released under the Freedom of Information Act and published by Government Attic. The files show, however, that security protocols may result in a slow roll-out at some agencies.

The Federal Trade Commission, National Archives and Records Administration, Deparment of Veterans Affairs, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and Tennessee Valley Authority each produced internal records which discuss the merits of iPads and similar devices.

Another federal agency, the General Services Administration, said that it would charge $113,680 to yield its internal discussions.

Though Apple's market-leading tablet appears to be the clear choice among rank-and-file workers, emails show security-focused IT staff leaning toward RIM's BlackBerry Playbook instead—at least until they get a closer look at it.

At the National Archives, released documents[PDF] included a proposal to "extend the availability of tablets to potentially all NARA staff," a capital planning review, and various memos and emails between staff.

"We have found the iPad for be very useful in investigating work at the OIG," wrote one agency official. "For example, instead of taking a bulky laptop to the collector shows where we have a display, or in some cases just walk around to meet and greet, the iPad works much better. It is light, has great battery power and is super fast."

The capital planning review saw nearly universal enthusiasm in the feedback garnered: "The iPad has dramatically improved my productivity," says one worker. " ... It would be great if we could find an iPad use for staff tied to our hard core busines functions - record centers, pulls/re-files, description, reference, etc. That would yield a big productivity gain and demonstrate a solid business case for more widespread use of tablets for our staff."

Adds another: "NARA should start building [iPad] apps for customers."

In the VA's disclosures[PDF], a memo dated August 22 describes a a pilot program established to determine the viability of iOS. The program, conducted with the help of Agilex, a government IT services contractor, was scheduled to end Oct 1. The memo prohibited field operations staff from purchasing more iOS devices: "VA currently has enough pilot users to determine viability..."

In another letter, the VA's assistant IT secretary writes that its remote access solutions are not compatible with devices such as the iPad, and discusses the measures they might take to allow workers to use them.

A selection of heavily-redacted documents from the FTC include details of a pitch from RIM to equip staff with its Blackberry PlayBook tablet[PDF]. Unfortunately for the Canadian firm, the device's shortcomings soon crop up in the form of a negative PC World review shared among officials.

At the Tennessee Valley Authority, staff produced a slick internal newsletter[PDF] covering the increased interest in tablets.

At the NHTSA, the BlackBerry Playbook is seen to have security advantages over the iPad[PDF]: "Given that Blackberry has built a strong reputation in enterprise security for movile deices in the federal sector, it does give it a leg up over Apple in the Enterprise Security space," writes one staffer in an email.

Responding to reports of increased interest in Apple's iPad by other government agencies, a senior IT project manager suggests Apple's portables are insecure due to the ability of users to "jailbreak" them.

"It's pretty obvious that with a security flaw clearly known, these devices should not be distributed beyond the R&D group," he writes. "I guess I have to ask the obvious, how is this an authorized piece of hardware at this point in any gov't shop?"

Unfortunately, RIM's alternative suffers from its own disadvantage: no-one seems to want one.

"I'm not hearing a huge uproar for the Playbook, probably 'cause of the downsides ... mentioned below," writes on staffer.

"I'm going to skip it," writes the project manager, concluding one email thread released to the public. "I only had a passing fancy." Tags: , , , ,

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Epic Star Wars snark tee: "Show us on the trilogy where George hurt you"

By at 6:03 am Sunday, Oct 16


Another find from New York Comic-Con: this epic Star Wars snark tee from Joel Watson, creator of Hijinks Ensue, a most excellent webcomic.

T-shirt: George Hurt You [shop.blindferret.com] Tags: , , , , , , ,

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Sunday, 23 October 2011

24k Gold Sorapot auction to benefit Amit Gupta

By at 12:43 am Monday, Oct 17

Designer Joey Roth is auctioning a limited run of 24-karat gold Sorapots to help out BB pal Amit Gupta, who recently fell ill with leukaemia: "South Asians are severely underrepresented in the pool of registered bone marrow donors. 100% of profits from the auctions will go to drives, both here and in India, to find and register potential donors."

The odds of someone of South Asian descent finding a match are only 1 in 20,000.

Here's my review of the Sorapot from some time ago.

Sorapot - 24k Gold Limited Edition to benefit Amit Gupta [eBay auction] Tags: , , ,

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#OccupyWallSt sign of the day: "It's Wrong."

By at 5:12 pm Saturday, Oct 15

Snapped by Ben Furnas. Protester/sign-maker's name unknown. Ben got another funny shot here. Tags: , , , ,

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Bookbinding in the Digital Age: an interview with Michael Greer

By at 11:10 pm Sunday, Oct 16

Michael Greer is a Bookbinder. I interviewed him to find out more about his unusual profession and his recent creation, the binary Genesis.

Could you tell us a bit about yourself?

I’m a guy who loves books. For years that’s meant teaching literature both here and abroad. I like getting into the heavy stuff. I work with teenagers who understand Hobbes, and when we read the Odyssey together, we read the whole thing, not just the fantasy bits. But I also like working with my hands and that’s why being a bookbinder just seems to fit. It seems like such a rarity nowadays-the possibility to work with one’s hands. Especially to create something from start to finish. And then when that something happens to be the text of a really good book, it just works.

What happened on your trip to Morocco?

By the spring of 2007 I was finishing up 4 years teaching at an American school in Casablanca. One of my colleagues had these beautiful leather bound books on his shelves at home and he told me where I could find the binder. So for a few years I would take the train up to Rabat and drop off a few books now and again.

Just before my wife and I started packing to leave, I brought one last project to the binder. I had put together a bunch of essays and travel articles that I’d written and formatted into a proper book. I made seven copies and brought them to the binder. A week or so later I went to pick them up. By this time I was an established client so he really made them nice…all kinds of beautiful marbled papers and nice leathers. It was one thing to have another author’s book rebound, but seeing your own in full leather…well, I was hooked.

School was out so I was there at an unusual time (for me) and as I was talking to the old man who owned the shop I heard a loud pounding from behind the wall. “What’s that?” I asked. “The binder,” he said. I’d always thought he was the binder, so it kind of took me by surprise. Turns out that the actual binder worked in the basement. I’d never seen him. I asked the owner if I could come watch him work one day. The next week my wife and I showed up. The binder hadn’t been told we were coming and seemed a little at a loss at first. I asked a question, my wife translated, and he would give one or two word replies. After a few of these exchanges he got up and reached behind a bunch of old rags and pulled out an old book. For the rest of the day, he showed us the way a book was made. He also told stories about the shop and it came out he would be retiring and the shop would probably close. It was hard news. The end of something special.

That afternoon as my wife and I walked to the train, I told her I wanted to learn bookbinding and that’s what happened. After the summer, I worked at the shop for free and learned by watching and then by doing. It was one of the best experiences of my life.

Could you describe the bookbinding process?

The bookbinding process can be disturbing. It’s violent at first. You literally tear the book apart. Most older books were sewn, so you cut the thread and then pull each signature or booklet off the book. Then you sew them back together again on a sewing frame which is basically a loom for books.

With so much thread in the book, it’s fatter in back than in front, so to correct for this, the spine is glued up and rounded to take up some of the swell. After that, the book is put into a press and the spine is hammered so that the signatures bend over creating little shoulders. Essentially, you’re creating an arch. The boards act as columns. The arch of the spine works to fight gravity and keep the pages from sagging too much on the shelves.

While the glue is drying you prepare the boards. Heavy carton is cut to size and lined with newspaper on the inside which makes them warp and sort of hug the text block. It looks awful. These boards get sanded and then attached to the text block with the cords. Meanwhile, the leather is cut out. In Morocco, we had a great machine that tapered off the leather so that it would fold over the edges better, but now I do all that work by hand. The leather is pasted up and then sort of molded onto the back of the book and then the front and back covers. It’s tricky getting it folded over at the top and bottom of the spine and bookbinders pride themselves on the shape they give to these “endcaps.” The pull of the leather counteracts the pull of the newsprint and the boards end up flat.

The final task is the finishing…putting on the title with gold foil. It’s the hardest part of the job and the most stressful. You’ve got a pallet full of hot letters and one chance to place them squarely onto the back of a curved spine. I usually feel pretty awful about a book until it finally gets covered in leather. They just look so bad. But then my spirits lift and once the gold lettering is on, I’m usually feeling pretty happy again. It’s like alchemy.

What's the importance of bookbinding in a digital age?

My friend who owns several bookstores often laughs at me. “We’re in a dying trade,” he says. Too often, I have to agree with him. But when I get sick of all the information beaming at me through the computer and over the radio and tv, a book made of paper can be just the thing. It’s nice to handle something that is still unplugged.

The other thing is that so much of the digital world is actually more ephemeral than the physical world. I have ten year old computer files that I can’t read. How long will a Nook last? Last night I was reading a book by Ernie Pyle about the Second World War when my wife walked into the room. It dawned on me that she was in our bedroom, but I was watching our navy transports unload soldiers on the beaches of Sicily. I was plugged in but the book wasn’t. Then it will go back onto the shelf until someone else picks it up…ten, twenty, twelve hundred years from now.

What's the most satisfying thing about being a bookbinder? What are the challenges?

Bookbinding is one of mankind’s oldest technologies and one that still can’t be beat. I like the continuity, the fact that I learned from someone who had learned from someone…and so on. In the US, hand bookbinding as a trade has been nearly dead for many years. A few of us quixotic dreamers hang on. Still, the revolution in the last decade in on-demand publishing could create a space for us. Twenty years ago, self-publishers paid a hefty sum to print maybe 250 copies of their family history. They gave away ten and the rest went into the attic. For about the same amount of money, I can print and bind ten full leather volumes and create others on demand. The difficulty is letting people know that this kind of thing exists. When I do fairs, people often approach my table full of books with a mystified smile and say, “I didn’t know anybody did this stuff anymore.” If bookbinders can get the word out, we might be able to carve out a place for our services in the growing world of digital publishing.

How did you come up with the idea of a binary Genesis?

Initially, I just wanted to see what that river of ones and zeros would look like on the page. But then it just seemed like an idea I could wrap myself around. The bible had been translated into so many languages, why not put it in binary and bind it medieval style? I liked the irony, but I also liked what it said about the longevity of a book as a repository of information. I’ve owned three or four computers and they never made it past five years. How long will my book last?

How have people responded to the binary Genesis project? What fascinates them about it?

At the Maker Faire this year, people loved it. I always encourage people to pick up and handle my books. Like me a few years ago, many of them had never seen or handled a leather bound book, so at first they’re drawn to that. The title is in binary on the cover so they really don’t know what it is. When they open it up and see all those ones and zeros they kind of laugh. But then when I tell them it is the Book of Genesis in binary, they really seem to get it.

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Apple iPhone 4S: 4 million sold in first 3 days

By at 6:53 am Monday, Oct 17

Apple Inc says today that 4 million iPhone 4S have been sold since it went on sale October 14. In-store sales began Friday in Japan, Australia, France, the UK, Germany, Canada and the US. Over 1 million orders were received online in the first 24 hours, up from 600,000 for the iPhone 4.

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Post-steampunk movements

By at 1:03 pm Sunday, Oct 16

Some post-steampunk ideas I had at yesterday's preview screening of Vintage Tomorrows (a documentary on steampunk and its relationship to technology), premised on the idea that new movements will simply subtract letters:

* Teampunks: dress like athletes
* Eamespunks: design chairs
* M-punks: use mobile devices
* Punkpunks: inhabit a notional contrafactual alternate history where Malcolm McLaren is responsible for all technological innovation after 1977 Tags: , ,

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Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra (13 of 78)


COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra by Khan Academy. Copyright 2011 by Khan Academy.
Share with a a friend! Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0


Today’s Algebra lesson (in video) from the Khan Academy is:

Averages

To view other Khan Academy videos, you can find them at their website here.

Enjoy!

-Susan Danziger
Founder, DailyLit
@susandanziger, @dailylit

P.S. Note that given the length of these lessons, you may want to adjust your settings to receive one or two lessons a week.





Question of the Week: in exactly 50 words (no more, no less), tell us your scariest, creepiest most chilling story. Click here to enter your 50 Word Fright.




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Saturday, 22 October 2011

Lady Liberty's arm and torch

By at 11:58 am Sunday, Oct 16


One for the demonstrators in some 1,000 cities in some 80 countries who are #occupying:

The arm and torch of the Statue of Liberty in Madison Square Park, New York. These portions of the Statue were exhibited to raise funds for the completion of the statue and its pedestal. The arm and torch remained in the park from 1876 until 1882. Members of the public could pay fifty cents to climb to the balcony of the torch.

The Arm of Liberty, 1876-1882 [howtobearetronaut.com] Tags: , , ,

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#OccupyWallst: video of NYPD arrests in Washington Square Park

By at 7:44 am Sunday, Oct 16

[Video Link]

Occupy Wall Street protests took place in New York and around the world yesterday. In New York, thousands packed Times Square, then broke off into smaller groups occupying other public areas of the city.

Josh Harkinson of Mother Jones was reporting from the protests in NYC yesterday, and captured this video that shows riot police arresting protesters at Washington Square Park. Watch the whole thing.

Harkinson was nearly arrested in the course of filming this, as you can see for yourself towards the end, when he identifies himself as a member of the press who wishes to document the arrests. The NYPD clearly did not want any such documentation.

The police officer who approaches protesters initially is sympathetic and respectful. He pleads with the protesters to go home; all the officers have been at it since 8AM and are tired, and want to go home to their families. The protester replies by reading out the First Amendment. A protester is singing the 1940 Woodie Guthrie anthem, "This Land Is Your Land."

Unlike the park that houses the original OWS occupation near Wall Street, Washington Square is a publicly-owned space that's subject to a 12 a.m. closing time imposed by New York City's Department of Parks and Recreation. As midnight approached, the New York City Police Department dispatched more than 100 police officers in riot gear to push out the occupiers. Some of them chose to resist, and I was there inside the police cordon to capture this exclusive video (the confrontation with police happens near the end).

"This land is your land, this land is my land,
From California to the New York Island."

Follow Harkinson on Twitter here. Tags: ,

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Octopi* Wall Street

By at 4:55 pm Sunday, Oct 16


Wade sez, "This cartoon appeared in U.S. Money vs. Corporation Currency, ;Aldrich plan' by Alfred Owen Crozier, published by The Magnet company in Cincinnati, Ohio."

*I have one (1) delicious knuckle-sandwich here for the first wisenheimer to engage in octopi/octopuses pedantry. "Octopuses Wall Street?" Really? (Thanks, Wade!)

Octopi Wall Street [twitter.com] Tags: , , ,

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U.S. govt's General Services Administration wants $113,680 to respond to FOIA request for internal discussion of iPads

By at 6:27 pm Saturday, Oct 15

?_? Anyone got any spare change for the anonymous submitter? Tags: ,

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Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra (7 of 78)


COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra by Khan Academy. Copyright 2011 by Khan Academy.
Share with a a friend! Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0


Today’s Algebra lesson (in video) from the Khan Academy is:

Algebra: Slope and Y-intercept Intuition

To view other Khan Academy videos, you can find them at their website here.

Enjoy!

-Susan Danziger
Founder, DailyLit
@susandanziger, @dailylit

P.S. Note that given the length of these lessons, you may want to adjust your settings to receive one or two lessons a week.





Question of the Week: Which book's movie adaptation improved on or was comparable to the original book? Click here to share.




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UK media swallowed the "adult content" filter line

By at 3:49 am Monday, Oct 17

My latest Guardian column, "Adult content filters can't replace good parenting," is a critique of the media coverage of Britain's new national "adult content" filter. The reporting on this story all led with uncritical repetition of the government's line that this would block "all adult content" -- nevermind that no two people agree on a definition of "adult content" and even if they did, the filter would inevitably miss loads of "adult content" and block lots of stuff that wasn't "adult."

Presenting a parent who is trying to keep their children safe with the question: "Would you like to block all adult content on your internet connection?" is terribly misleading, designed to play on parental fears and bypass critical judgement. Better to ask: "Would you like us to block some pornography (but not all of it), and a lot of other stuff, according to secret blacklists composed by anonymous third-party contractors who have been known to proudly classify photos of Michaelangelo's David as 'nudity?'"

It's simplistic to say that governments should abide by the principle "do no harm", but it's perfectly reasonable to demand that policies should at least do some good. When our national information policy is turned over to anonymous, unaccountable censorware vendors, we fail to deliver a safe online environment for our children and we undermine our own free access to information. It's a lose-lose proposition.

As a parent, I worry about what my kid finds on the net. At three and a half, my daughter is already old enough to drive a little tablet and check out cartoons on YouTube. Just the other day, I heard some odd dialogue emerging from across the sofa, and I had a peek at my daughter's screen. To my surprise, I found that she had discovered a little interlinked pocket of aggressive, kid-targeted Barbie adverts, uploaded by the official Mattel account, masterfully wrought pester-power timebombs designed to convert my kid into a nagging doll-acquisition machine. What's more, my kid had heretofore only watched ripped DVDs, YouTube cartoons, and CBeebies and had literally never seen a video advert before.

Adult content filters can't replace good parenting [guardian.co.uk] Tags: , , , ,

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Friday, 21 October 2011

Custom Zombie action-figure kits

By at 3:04 pm Saturday, Oct 15

Seen at New York Comic-Con, which I'm presently attending: the forthcoming "Create Your Own Zombie Action Figure" kits, which are available for pre-order, and sport arms, legs, torsos, heads, chest prosthesis, and wardrobe items that you can mix and match to make the perfect zombie toy. The box-art is fantastic -- the whole package stopped at 20 feet and sucked me in. The gentleman working at the booth is also the mad genius behind the reissue of the classic Mego action figures, which include a number of contrafactual toys that were never released but should have been, "re-created" with pitch-perfect packaging and design.

"CREATE YOUR OWN ZOMBIE" Action Figure Customizing Kit! [fearwerx.com] Tags: , , , , , ,

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Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra (10 of 78)


COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra by Khan Academy. Copyright 2011 by Khan Academy.
Share with a a friend! Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0


Today’s Algebra lesson (in video) from the Khan Academy is:

Algebra: Slope 3

To view other Khan Academy videos, you can find them at their website here.

Enjoy!

-Susan Danziger
Founder, DailyLit
@susandanziger, @dailylit

P.S. Note that given the length of these lessons, you may want to adjust your settings to receive one or two lessons a week.





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Romanians invade Comic-Con

By at 5:39 am Sunday, Oct 16

A tip for New York Comic-Congoers: don't miss the Romanian booth for a look at some of the weirdest, coolest comics being made in the world today. See my piece in Forbes from a few years back on Romania's "otaci." Tags: , ,

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Court verdict on Adnan Latif not for you to know

By at 10:11 am Sunday, Oct 16

Fortunately, the DC Circuit Court of Appeals has issued an opinion on Gitmo detainee Adnan Farhan Abd Al Latif's appeal against his continued detention by the Obama administration. Unfortunately, it's none of your business.

Latif's legal status is "indeterminate", according to Wikipedia, despite a judge ordering the administration to "take all necessary and appropriate diplomatic steps to facilitate Latif's release forthwith." Latif, a Yemeni citizen, has been held in Guantanamo Bay since 2002.

USCourts.gov [Thanks, Anonymous!] Tags: ,

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Sea slug steals plant genes

By at 8:55 am Monday, Oct 17

A species of sea slug can become photosynthetic by eating plants. The creatures eat algae for two weeks when they're young, and are then capable of surviving off the algae's photosynthetic abilities for the rest of their year-long lives. (Via Jurgen Hubert) Tags: ,

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#OccupyWallSt: 24 arrested at Citibank, closing their bank accounts

By at 5:17 pm Saturday, Oct 15


[Video Link]

Ken Layne at Wonkette:

Be patient through the first 90 seconds — haha, attention span of a gnat! — because a remarkable little drama unfolds with protesters inside the Citibank branch communicating with protesters outside, all very reserved, collecting names and birthdates of the people about to be arrested inside. And then, brutish cops seize a woman in a business suit who is saying, “I’m a customer, I’m a customer,” and showing her Citibank checkbook. Apparently she is here to close her account, and for that she is manhandled by a bunch of thug cops who should be careful where they go from now on. Anyway, closing your account is now a go-to-jail offense.

Related item at Wall Street Journal There's a related roundup at Addicting Info. Alternate Video Link.

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Thursday, 20 October 2011

Bo Diddley's son arrested in park named after Bo Diddley, during "Occupy Gainesville, FL"

By at 1:15 pm Sunday, Oct 16

From the Independent Florida Alligator via Guardian UK, via Greg Mitchell's blog, proof that awesomeness sometimes just runs in the family:

Ellas Anthony McDaniel, the 56-year-old son of rhythm and blues singer Bo Diddley, was arrested for trespassing in the downtown plaza named for his father.

At least four members of the Occupy Gainesville movement, including McDaniel, were arrested Friday morning for trespassing on the Bo Diddley Community Plaza after the park closed. The demonstration was peaceful and the protesters said they decided to get arrested to prove a point.

"This is my father's park," said McDaniel, a Gainesville resident. "For them to arrest me in that plaza is ludicrous. ... I'm an American. This is freedom of assembly."

He's carrying a sign that says "HOPE ISN'T JUST FOR PRESIDENTS."

Read the rest here.

Above, the great Bo Diddley performing Hey! Bo Diddley in 1965. Video Link. And below, my favorite. Video Link.

PHOTO: Brett Le Blanc / Alligator Staff. Bo Diddley's son, Ellas Anthony McDaniel, 56, arrested for trespassing on Bo Diddley Plaza during the Occupy Gainesville protest late Thursday night.

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Dance your Ph.D. thesis: Teaching a robot to appreciate beats

By at 8:45 am Monday, Oct 17

Every year, intrepid Ph.D. students face off in a high-stakes competition for honor, glory, and the intermingling of science and art. The goal: Dance your Ph.D. thesis. I showed you the finalists last year. This year, Science magazine has posted all 53 entries online, before the finalists are chosen. I'll confess, I've not yet watched them all. So I can't say this is my favorite, but it is well-done and did immediately catch my attention.

"Human-Based Percussion and Self-Similarity Detection in Electroacoustic Music" is, basically, researcher J. Anderson Mills' attempt to teach a computer to hear percussion sounds the way a human does. In the video, Shiny Robot learns how to dance. You can read a full description of how the various parts of this dance tie into Mills' research at the video site:

The dissertation research began with a two-choice, forced-interval experiment in which 29 humans were asked to rate isolated sounds from most to least percussive. The sound characteristic of rise time was found to be the most correlated with percussion of the characteristics tested. The experiment is represented in the dance by the first two interactions between Alain and Shiny, during which Shiny expresses his inability to correctly choose the stronger percussion sound.

... The final stage of the dissertation research was to use the detection algorithm with real-world music to discover self-similarity in the percussion patterns. By using auto-correlation analysis, the detection algorithm can be used to time the repetition and near repetition in music percussion. Shiny demonstrates the self-similarity of the music by several final repetitve dance moves, repeating appropriately at the time scale of beats, measures, and phrases.

Video Link

Via Keith Cowing

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Bananas and donuts go great together

By at 2:39 pm Sunday, Oct 16

201110161432It appears that infamous wire fraud criminal Charles Keating doesn't have as much influence on the availability of pornography at 7-Eleven as he once did. Photo by Mitch O'Connell

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Occupy Wall Street takes over Times Square (updated)

By at 4:26 pm Saturday, Oct 15

445pm ET: Happening as I post this. Watch live video here. More on the New York City protesters' longer-term plans back at Zucotti Park, including a map, at Mother Jones. (via @antderosa)

Update, 715pm ET: I've been following live reports on Twitter from various sources, and the situation in Times Square sounds intense. By various estimates, 15-20,000 demonstrators have occupied the Square. NYPD are out in full force, including the Counter-Terrorism unit (photo below).

At least a dozen (maybe more) officers on horseback, and buses and paddywagons ready for mass arrests. Multiple sources on the scene describe police tactics aimed at, more or less, "kettling" people into a defined zone, surrounding them with nets, officers on horseback, and police with batons.

Here's a video uploaded a while ago that shows protesters near the "Toys-R-Us" at Times Square. And here's another, that gives a sense of the crowd density a couple hours ago. And here is another, showing mounted officers entering the area filled with demonstrators.

And below, via AntDeRosa at Reuters (a good one to follow today):

Occupy Wall Street protesters shout slogans against banks and economic system while they take part in a protest at Times Square in New York October 15, 2011 REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

There are various reports floating around on Twitter now that NYPD has been "authorized to use tear gas" against protesters. Some on the scene are tweeting that NYPD is ordering crowds: "Leave now and you won't get hurt."

The situation sounds volatile, and like a very large number of people (including families with children, and disabled persons who have limited mobility) are packed into an ever-shrinking space. I hope this does not end badly.

Peter Rothberg of The Nation tweets:

According to multiple sources, all #OWS protesters in Times Square now face arrest if they don't immediately proceed out of the area.

Photo: Above, Molly Knefel. Below, Mumbai Chopra.

Some sources for live coverage tonight: Live blog at NY Daily News. @antderosa, @newyorkist, @owsbot, @joepauca, @jeffrae, @occupywallst.

Update, 8pm ET: Reports of arrests beginning, from multiple sources in Times Square. Joe Pauca: "NYPD paddywagon truck just pulled up. One person has been arrested. Now two. Both placed in truck. More getting arrested. Everyone is yelling to let them go. More NYPD paddy wagons arriving on the scene... jeffrae: Some people at 46th St seem penned in. I can't see but 3 wagons have been brought in. People chanting, 'Let them go.'"

Reuters has a live video stream here. The police are ordering the crowd to step back. The crowd chants back, defiantly, "YOU STEP BACK."

Update, 8:23pm ET: NY Daily News reports that 71 (and counting) have been arrested. Similar reports from eyewitnesses on-site.

From @somebadideas, in NYC: " Arrests, definite, NY police scanner says 2 NYPD are being transported by EMS for injuries (no details)."

From @mmflint, who is on-site: "Arrests have begun. (I mean, of peaceful citizens. Still no banker or CEO in jail.) Now we're watching people being dragged away."

And from @theother99: "Situation remains v. tense. No further arrests. NYPD presence grows. 150+ uniformed officers on site, some riot police in helmets. NYPD riot police now approaching from back side on 46th St.... at least 15+ NYPD Riot Police approach from east side of 46th St. Crowd being cleared to sidewalks."

Boing Boing reader Timothy Krause says, "Here's a photo I shot at tonight's OWS rally-party in Times Square showing a protester being arrested."

Update, 9:00pm ET: Multiple reports that the police have taken down the barricades, and what looked like a very tense confrontation has dissolved. More than a hundred arrests, by some accounts. Massive crowds at the height of the action, 20,000 or more by some estimates. Sources I'm reading on Twitter who were there describe the numbers as overwhelming. Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

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Rome Burns

That is the graffiti in one of the destroyed streets in this Saturday's "indignati" demonstration. It ended in violence against the police, city security, and last but not least the pacifist organizers of the manifestation, in tune with the world wide movements OCCUPY.

The graffiti sounds like some epic motto of ancient Rome when power struggles burned palaces, libraries, and streets.

Roman life may not be too different after all, except that 2000 years later, we somehow believe that those conflicts should be resolved without arson. Maybe we are wrong. Maybe the fact that people are organized using web networks does not free them from timeless forms of treachery and palace intrigue, or the manipulation and destruction of good political intent.

Anyway, after the mayhem, the search was on for the hooded arsonists, organized through the Internet and through private video shots by participants.

Italy remembers very well the violent "Years of Lead" (late 60's to early 80's), when red and black terrorists planted bombs in public places, blasting innocent citizens in the name of their distorted concept of supreme justice. For years they rampaged beyond the reach of police, courts and other institutions.

Even today, after many years, some cases of public terrorism have not been resolved. Books have been written by important authors to explain the supposedly important difference between a red and a black bomb detonated in public. The Nobel prize authors Dario Fo wrote a play where he showed how easily the police could frame anarchists for terrorism, killing them by legal means. There was a famous question about crime: a chi giova, who profits from it?

Today decades political violence is less sophisticated and ideological. Rome on fire Oct 16 2011 could have been Belgrade Feb 18 2008, when nationalist hooligans, upset about Kosovo, burned foreign embassies.

This is how Italian press reported:

"Black bloc, the day after.

Rome woke up after the nightmare of violence. Devastated, injured, the city counts the wounds. In the streets cars are burned, roads left without precious sanpietrini stones used as bullets, the facades of banks hotels and shops destroyed, black from smoke: at least one million of euros is the damage.

135 injured people, luckily no dead. 500 violent intruders destroyed a protest of 300 000 pacific protesters: the battle lasted for 5 hours in Rome downtown: a boy has lost one eye, one men has lost two fingers and a policeman suffered a heart attack.

International day of anger, Roman version"

"You can recognize them immediately by they clothes: pants, hoodies, helmets, masks, backpacks. All in black. Sometimes they even hold a banner in front of them: we are not asking for the future we are taking the present. They individuate the target, make a cross, take off they backpack , take out their hammers and other tools and hit. They started with the cars…"

Eugenio Scalfari , in La Reppublica editorial commented:

And who are the indignitati? They are neither right or left winged., in the traditional sense of those words. They are however not conservative, they have concrete objectives: they want public goods for everybody, they have no faith in private property including the state administrated property by political and power elites.People should possess and rule the goods they have where they live as water food forests, communication networks, houses, factories hospitals. And banks should stop to exist except for elementary transactions based on use and exchange value."

It' s a sad end of an attempt in Rome of the globalized protest starting from Madrid through Occupy Wall street in NY and other 80 cities which managed a peaceful protest.

It all happened while the usual protestors where on the streets; in somewhat a bigger number: plus a feminist , an angry teacher, a perky granny, a guy who lost his job hand in hand with an extracomunitario and finally a indignado youngster. Then black bloc stormed in and all hell broke loose: the spectre of bloody Genova riots between the protestors and the police ten years ago, anni di piombo of public terrorism and police mafia 40 years ago and Rome in flames 2000 ago.

A chi giova, who profits from all this? Premiere Berlusconi has been confirmed in power again after months of public sex and corruption scandals as if nothing happened. As if indignity did not exist or protest. The Italians seem not to need a foreign enemy: they bring it all alone on themselves.

La Repubblica: "Outraged, burned the flags of Italy and the European Union"; "The broken windows" Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

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Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra (8 of 78)


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Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra by Khan Academy. Copyright 2011 by Khan Academy.
Share with a a friend! Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0


Today’s Algebra lesson (in video) from the Khan Academy is:

Algebra: Slope

To view other Khan Academy videos, you can find them at their website here.

Enjoy!

-Susan Danziger
Founder, DailyLit
@susandanziger, @dailylit

P.S. Note that given the length of these lessons, you may want to adjust your settings to receive one or two lessons a week.





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Wednesday, 19 October 2011

Occupy Wall Street: a protester's version of the Citibank arrests

By at 6:32 am Monday, Oct 17

Gawker has published the account of Elana Carroll, one of the 24 (or more?) "Occupy Wall Street" protesters in New York who were arrested at the Greenwich Village Citibank location this weekend.

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Writer: "my publisher said I could only get the rights to my out-of-print book back if I bought their leftover copies from them"

By at 4:51 am Sunday, Oct 16

Writer Doranna Durgin sez, "For eighteen months, publisher Fitzhenry & Whiteside has refused to honor the contract reversion clause for one of their fantasy titles; they have persistently demurred, ignored, and rebuffed attempts to discuss the situation, whether approached via agent, SFWA GriefCom, or directly. At this point, silence is their friend--but not in the interests of anyone else, including writers who are actively submitting YA works. The linked post presents a summary based on saved emails, the contract clause in question, and screenshot evidence."

Some context for non-writers out there: while creators in other fields (music, say) are typically required to assign their copyrights to their publishers/labels/studios, fiction writers have a much less oppressive arrangement with our publishers. We typically license our works to our publishers, and the publishers only get to keep those licensed rights for as long as the book is "in print." The definition of "in print" has evolved over the years, but typically it means, "the publisher has copies that it supplies to bookstores through its fulfillment system." The exact details of "in print" are spelled out in each book's contract.

According to her version of the story (a version corroborated by independent sources, like the Science Fiction Writers of America's Grievance Committee) Durgin's publisher is most certainly not keeping her book in print per the terms of their contract. The fact that they've demanded that Durgin buy back their leftover copies of book as a condition of holding up their end of the contract is without precedent -- indeed, it's a breathtaking violation of publishing norms, the sort of thing you're more likely to encounter from ripoff vanity publishers and not a respected house like Fitz and Witz. Writer Beware indeed.

After another nudge—which included the reminder that the publisher could continue to sell warehoused copies in their usual fashion, as well as a reminder of the boilerplate changes–we were finally told: “This book is in stock, on sale on our website, it continues to sell albeit in lesser quantities. [my note: yes, a handful of copies a year] We have some 1,600 in stock with no reason to revert rights.”

How about because it’s a contractual obligation?

...Early the next day, I heard from the GriefCom chair that he had received a phone call, and that the unidentified caller took him to task in no uncertain terms–claiming harassment, declaring there would be no reversion on the title, and warning that she would “report” us to [prominent Canadian SF writer #1] and [prominent Canadian SF writer #2]—all before hanging up on him.

Writer Beware: Fitzhenry & Whiteside [doranna.net] Tags: , , , , ,

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HOW TO: Make silver ink that conducts electricity

By at 8:25 am Monday, Oct 17

This custom silver ink, developed by materials researchers at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, allows you to draw working circuits out on paper. It's extremely cool, and the video shows you step-by-step how they make it. Bonus: This ink provides an actual reason to use cursive.

Video Link (Via Aaron Rowe) Tags: , , , ,

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Virgin Galactic opens world's first commercial spaceport

By at 6:36 am Monday, Oct 17

Richard Branson blogs: "A historic day today in New Mexico as we will be opening the first commercial spaceport in the world - Spaceport America."

More at the Virgin Galactic website.

We'll have photos from the unveiling event on Boing Boing soon. Tags: , ,

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Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra (9 of 78)


COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra by Khan Academy. Copyright 2011 by Khan Academy.
Share with a a friend! Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0


Today’s Algebra lesson (in video) from the Khan Academy is:

Algebra: Slope 2

To view other Khan Academy videos, you can find them at their website here.

Enjoy!

-Susan Danziger
Founder, DailyLit
@susandanziger, @dailylit

P.S. Note that given the length of these lessons, you may want to adjust your settings to receive one or two lessons a week.





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#OccupyWallSt: video of man arrested at Times Square after following NYPD orders

By at 7:40 am Sunday, Oct 16

[Video Link]

A video shot at the Occupy Wall Street protest at Times Square yesterday, which at its peak included some 15-20,000 protesters. The man in this video, whose identity we do not know yet, is arrested by NYPD officers in what looks like a situation of entrapment.

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I Heart Guts: adorable anthropomorphic plush internal organs!

By at 5:19 pm Sunday, Oct 16


I Heart Guts sells absolutely excellent plush internal organs. I ran into them at New York Comic-Con today and had a chance to play with their wares, and they're adorable, well-made, and well, organy. They also have a fine line in cute anthropromorphic internal organ stickers.

Plush Organs [iheartguts.com] Tags: , , , , , ,

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Tuesday, 18 October 2011

Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra (11 of 78)


COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra by Khan Academy. Copyright 2011 by Khan Academy.
Share with a a friend! Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0


Today’s Algebra lesson (in video) from the Khan Academy is:

Algebra: Equation of a Line

To view other Khan Academy videos, you can find them at their website here.

Enjoy!

-Susan Danziger
Founder, DailyLit
@susandanziger, @dailylit

P.S. Note that given the length of these lessons, you may want to adjust your settings to receive one or two lessons a week.





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Wednesday, 12 October 2011

Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra (5 of 78)


COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra by Khan Academy. Copyright 2011 by Khan Academy.
Share with a a friend! Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0


Today’s Algebra lesson (in video) from the Khan Academy is:

Algebra: Solving Inequalities

To view other Khan Academy videos, you can find them at their website here.

Enjoy!

-Susan Danziger
Founder, DailyLit
@susandanziger, @dailylit

P.S. Note that given the length of these lessons, you may want to adjust your settings to receive one or two lessons a week.





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Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra (4 of 78)


COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra by Khan Academy. Copyright 2011 by Khan Academy.
Share with a a friend! Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0


Today’s Algebra lesson (in video) from the Khan Academy is:

Algebra: Linear Equations 4

To view other Khan Academy videos, you can find them at their website here.

Enjoy!

-Susan Danziger
Founder, DailyLit
@susandanziger, @dailylit

P.S. Note that given the length of these lessons, you may want to adjust your settings to receive one or two lessons a week.





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Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra (6 of 78)


COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra by Khan Academy. Copyright 2011 by Khan Academy.
Share with a a friend! Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0


Today’s Algebra lesson (in video) from the Khan Academy is:

Algebra: Graphing Lines 1

To view other Khan Academy videos, you can find them at their website here.

Enjoy!

-Susan Danziger
Founder, DailyLit
@susandanziger, @dailylit

P.S. Note that given the length of these lessons, you may want to adjust your settings to receive one or two lessons a week.





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Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra (3 of 78)


COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra by Khan Academy. Copyright 2011 by Khan Academy.
Share with a a friend! Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0


Today’s Algebra lesson (in video) from the Khan Academy is:

Equations 3

To view other Khan Academy videos, you can find them at their website here.

Enjoy!

-Susan Danziger
Founder, DailyLit
@susandanziger, @dailylit

P.S. Note that given the length of these lessons, you may want to adjust your settings to receive one or two lessons a week.





Question of the Week: Which book's movie adaptation improved on or was comparable to the original book? Click here to share.




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Tuesday, 11 October 2011

Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra (2 of 78)


COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Khan Academy Video Course: Algebra by Khan Academy. Copyright 2011 by Khan Academy.
Share with a a friend! Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0


Today’s Algebra lesson (in video) from the Khan Academy is:

Equations 2

To view other Khan Academy videos, you can find them at their website here.

Enjoy!

-Susan Danziger
Founder, DailyLit
@susandanziger, @dailylit

P.S. Note that given the length of these lessons, you may want to adjust your settings to receive one or two lessons a week.





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