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Saul Griffith is an inventor and entrepreneur. He did his PhD at MIT in programmable matter, exploring the relationship between bits and atoms, or information and materials. Since leaving MIT, he has co-founded a number of technology companies including Optiopia, Squid Labs, Instructables, Potenco, and Makani Power .

On the day before Thanksgiving, while everyone was distracted buying (or pardoning) turkeys, the Obama team announced that the president will go to Copenhagen and promise to try to commit to a carbon reduction schedule for the United States.

(More links if you want to see the news repeat it over and over again: 1, 2, 3)

On one hand, I want to be excited about this because unless the US makes a commitment to CO2 reductions, it's exceedingly unlikely that the rest of the world will bother. On the other hand, no one should be jumping in the aisles till we look at the numbers more carefully.

It's probably useful to first update yourself on the climate science. Here's a well-written, critical, and objective summary of recent scientific results released a few months ago. It was prepared as an update between the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) of 2007, and IPCC AR5, which will not to be completed until 2013. The PDF of the full report is well worth reading.

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Hemant Mehta does a fascinating interview with Ray Comfort, not about Creationism, but about Comfort's personal philosophy and the way he has gone about promoting Creationism and Christianity in general. Comfort, you'll recall, is the guy who tried to prove the existence of a benevolent interventionist God by appealing to the human-convenient shape of a banana--a plant that's been heavily modified by humans through controlled selection in agriculture. Kudos to Mehta for giving us a glimpse inside this particular head.

Hemant: The banana. Do you stand by the argument in your video? Do you regret saying what you did? Do you like when people associate that video with you? Was it a joke? Are you aware that the banana in your video is genetically modified while a "natural" banana would be virtually unrecognizable? (There are several other questions regarding the Banana, but these are the overall themes).

Ray: I deeply regret doing the banana routine on television without a live audience. I have been doing it for live audiences for more than 20 years, and it's never failed to get a lot of laughs. Regarding genetic modification. There isn't any evidence that the banana has changed its shape in the last 2,000 years. The anonymous creator of the well-publicized YouTube clip used a picture of a modern banana that was shaped like a potato, to make me look like a fool (and he did a pretty good job). To see evidence that the banana hasn't changed shape, go to the bottom of http://www.livingwaters.com/origin/presskit and click on the PDF of "The Banana Controversy." Humbling though it has been, the subject has worked in my favor. Being "The Banana Man" has left me with a very low bar to reach. People are quite amazed when I'm able to string a complete sentence together.

It's worth noting that, given Mehta's audience, this is pretty atheist-centric. However, I'm well aware that belief in the Christian God/Jesus (or any other deity) doesn't preclude acceptance of evolution and doesn't equate with scientific illiteracy. Mehta seems to be aware of that as well. Comfort, on the other hand, appears to be a little confused on the subject.

The Friendly Atheist: Interview With Ray Comfort

Image courtesy Flickr user ian_ransley, via CC

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Beschizza's Law: "Any sufficiently advanced reality is indistinguishable from Photoshop."

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Above is the mindbending work of camouflage artist Liu Bolin. More images over at Hi-Fructose!

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From the Journal of Emergency Medicine: "De Novo Cerebral Arteriovenous Malformation: Pink Floyd's Song "Brick in the Wall" as a Warning Sign." (via NCBI ROFL)

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Photo of ghostly eye on ceiling

 Cimages Var Ezwebin Site Storage Images Coast-To-Coast Repository Photos Creepy-Eye-On-Ceiling 446290-1-Eng-Us Creepy-Eye-On-Ceiling
A Coast to Coast listener named Alan sent them this amazing photo of a creepy giant spectral eye staring down at them in their bedroom. Alan says the eye turned out to be "a bedside light reflecting off a stack of CDs." Too bad. "Creepy eye on ceiling"
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Tonight, the National Geographic Channel visits a rural Brazilian town where "the 80 households in a one-square-mile area have reportedly some 38 pairs of twins. Blond, blue-eyed twins." Nat Geo then attempts to trace rumors connecting that creepy phenomenon to Nazi medical monster Joseph Mengele, who was on the lam in Brazil in the 1950s. I'm not sure I've seen a Nat Geo special that inspired this strong of a, "No, really, you're making this up, right?" response. I'm curious whether they turn up anything definitive, or whether this just ends up being a lot of speculation. Sadly, I don't have cable, so I probably won't find out. If anybody watches it, let me know what you think.

National Geographic Channel: Nazi Mystery: Twins From Brazil

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Bloomberg columnist Alice Schroeder reports that Goldman Sachs vampires are loading up on handguns to defend themselves against popular uprising:

"I just wrote my first reference for a gun permit," said a friend, who told me of swearing to the good character of a Goldman Sachs Group Inc. banker who applied to the local police for a permit to buy a pistol. The banker had told this friend of mine that senior Goldman people have loaded up on firearms and are now equipped to defend themselves if there is a populist uprising against the bank.

I called Goldman Sachs spokesman Lucas van Praag to ask whether it's true that Goldman partners feel they need handguns to protect themselves from the angry proletariat. He didn't call me back...

Plenty of Wall Streeters worry about the big discrepancies in wealth, and think the rise of a financial industry-led plutocracy is unjust. That doesn't mean any of them plan to move into a double-wide mobile home as a show of solidarity with the little people, though.

No, talk of Goldman and guns plays right into the way Wall- Streeters like to think of themselves. Even those who were bailed out believe they are tough, macho Clint Eastwoods of the financial frontier, protecting the fistful of dollars in one hand with the Glock in the other. The last thing they want is to be so reasonably paid that the peasants have no interest in lynching them.

Arming Goldman With Pistols Against Public: Alice Schroeder (via Making Light)

(Image: Eat the bankers, a Creative Commons Attribution photo from Iain Winfield's photostream)

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Wooster Collective ("a celebration of street art") has an article about "The Pink Lady of Malibu," which appeared over a tunnel in Malibu Canyon Road in 1966.

One Saturday morning, on October 29, 1966, a massive 60-foot-tall painting of a nude pink lady holding flowers suddenly appeared as you headed into the tunnel on Malibu Canyon Road.

As word of the massive pink lady spread, and the traffic on the highway grew to a halt, city officials decided "The Pink Lady" had to be removed. Firefighters were called to hosing her off the rocks. It didn't work. Buckets of paint thinner were thrown on the rocks. It only made her pink skin pinker.

As county officials worked on figuring out a way to remove The Pink Lady, a 31-year-old paralegal from Northridge, a woman named Lynne Seemayer, suddenly showed up on the road and admitted that she was the artist who did the piece.

Seemayer said that she was annoyed by the graffiti that was all over the canyon wall ("Valley Go Home" was a memorable slogan) and so, over a 10 month period, she started to secretly climb up under the moonlight and suspended herself by ropes to remove the graffiti.

At 8 P. M. on October 28 Seemayer painted the Pink Lady using ordinary house paint. By dawn it was done.

Snopes has more about the story.

The Story Of "The Pink Lady of Malibu" (Via Little Hokum Rag)

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Ingenious Pac Man ring-set


Rachel sez, "I just made these rings today, and think you might like them! They are handmade from sterling silver with black onyx "food points." As the saying goes, 'om nom nom!'

Yes, Rachel, I do like 'em! I like 'em a lot!

Pacman Ring Series- Sterling Silver and Black Onyx (Thanks, Rachel!)

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Core77's holiday gift guide

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The design blog Core77 has some great ideas in their 2009 holiday gift guide.

Solvate Customer Service Haggling, $25/hour

Consider the gift of time, in $25 increments, from Solvate Customer Service Haggling. This startup VC-backed company takes on numerous phone-related haggling challenges, with impressive case study results. 90 minutes saved in planning a last minute business trip. 30 minutes reducing DMV headaches. 45 minutes haggling down a four-figure iPhone abroad data charge. This holiday season, give the gift of delegation.

Core77's holiday gift guide

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The mayor of Ozark, Arkansas, has fired the policeman who tased a 10-year-old girl. He apparently had to exploit the same technicality previously used to suspend him: failure to use the built-in camera. [KATV]

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Tim Biskup designed a wallet made by Poketo, which will be offered at his upcoming show, "Art-Snob Eat Shit" at All Tomorrow's Parties' "Nightmare Before Christmas," December 4-6, 2009 at Butlin's Holiday Centre, Minehead, UK.

Tim Biskup not only designed the poster, tee shirts and other graphics for the upcoming My Bloody Valentine-curated "Nightmare Before Christmas" event for All Tomorrow's Parties, but will also be showing an exhibition of his own work at the on-site gallery, "Art-Snob Eat Shit". To add icing to the cake, Tim Biskup will be releasing an exclusive Poketo wallet, only available at the show, in addition to two new Poketo wallets available at Poketo.com.

Curated by My Bloody Valentine, "Nightmare Before Christmas" takes place during All Tomorrows Parties in the UK. The festival showcases world-renowned artists, and musicians ranging in style from post-rock, avant-garde, and underground hip-hop, with a more intimate feel than a mainstream music festival.  More information available at www.atpfestival.com.

Nightmare Before Christmas curated by My Bloody Valentine

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2010 will mark the 40th anniversary of one of the Internet's oldest memes: That Video Where They Blow Up a Beached Whale. To mark this momentous occasion, Asylum recently interviewed Paul Linnman, the TV reporter who recorded the footage that went on to become the the fifth-most-viewed viral video of all time.

"We're hearing this noise around us and we realize it is pieces of whale blubber hitting the ground around us (from) 1,000 yards away. A piece of blubber the size of a fingernail could kill you if it hit you in the right part of the head, so we ran away from the blast scene, down the dune and toward the parking lot. Then we heard a second explosion ahead of us, and we just kept going until we saw what it was: A car had been hit by this coffee-table-size piece of blubber and had its windows flattened all the way down to the seats."

The footage and Linnman's report made the evening news and eventually found its way into the national media, something that only earned him $90 extra bucks and $110 for Brazil "because he had a better union than I did apparently."

Asylum.com: Exploding Whale Video Reporter Looks Back Four Decades Later

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Radley Balko wonders what will happen to the court-document stealing deputy of Maricopa County: "I can't think of another case where a judge has ordered someone jailed for contempt and the police department has refused to carry out the order. I'm not sure what would happen next. A duel? Arm wrestling?"

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2935553971_b4c86cf410.jpgA new study conducted in Florida has given scientists reason to believe that hammerhead sharks may have vision comparable to that of humans. The researchers measured electrical activity in the eyes of half a dozen sharks from three different hammerhead species. They then put electrodes under the sharks' corneas and recorded electrical activity while shining lights in horizontal and vertical arcs around each eye. Compared to normal-headed sharks, the hammerheads had three times the visual overlap — that's what creates stereo vision and depth perception in animals with eyes that face forward. This, of course, helps them be faster and more efficient at hunting prey. But there's a catch: because their eyes are so far apart, hammerheads have these giant blind spots right in the middle of their head. As study leader Michelle McComb put it in an interview with National Geographic:

There's actually been anecdotal claims by divers that they see little fish schooling right in front of the hammerheads' heads. It's like the fish are swimming by and saying, Ha, ha, ha, you can't see me!

Hammerhead sharks have "human" vision [National Geographic]

Image via Eric Charlton's Flickr

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Guest Blogger: Paul Spinrad!

Pauls-Books

I'm very happy to welcome my friend Paul Spinrad back as a guest blogger. If you missed him the first time around, do yourself a favor and check out his previous posts on Boing Boing.

Paul is one of the most original thinkers I know, and a warm, friendly person. He's a freelance writer/editor with catholic interests, and is the Projects Editor for MAKE magazine and the author of The VJ Book and The Re/Search Guide to Bodily Fluids. He was also an early contributor to bOING bOING when it was an online zine. He lives in San Francisco. Please give him a warm welcome!

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Former beauty queen Solange Magnano died from plastic surgery complications on Sunday. She was Miss Argentina in 1994, and is the mother of 7-year old twins. 1 in 30 Argentines have had plastic surgery, according to CNN.

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Dan Gillmor sez,
As everyone knows, the nation's scam artists, monopolists and market-riggers have all gone into hibernation during the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. This has given the Federal Trade Commission the breathing room it needs to intercede in an arena where its role is, at best, unclear.

This week, the commission is holding a two-day workshop entitled How Will Journalism Survive the Internet Age? -- the purpose of which is 'to explore how the Internet has affected journalism.'

The commission has discovered that the advertising model which once supported many kinds of journalism has eroded. Quoting several economists, the workshop notice says 'public affairs reporting may indeed be particularly subject to market failure.'

Market failure? What about the market failure -- which as far as I can tell never got any attention from a succession of FTC people during the past half-century -- of the monopolies and oligopolies created by media organizations during that period? The public affairs journalism was, for the most part, a modest spinoff of the extortionate advertising prices they charged when they had near-absolute market power to charge anything they wished. Only when there's real competition does the FTC get interested.

?FTC's Shallow Dive into Journalism's Future (Thanks, Dan!)
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Dumpster, wrong color

xJDyZ.jpg Brian Klug noticed a dumpster in his parking lot painted incorrectly. He fixed it in 'shop.
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Paul A Young's Adventures With Chocolate: chocopornoholic enchanting cookbook

Swatch Adventures with Chocolate: 80 sensational recipe is chocolate genius Paul A. Young's first foray into cook-books, and, like his wonderful shops in London, it's playful, inspiring, delicious and surprising. Young's gifted touch with truffles, brownies and drinking chocolate have made his Islingto... more

Lasik: is it worth $6000?

Swatch I'm sick and tired of washing my contact lenses everyday, and my dog Malcolm recently broke my glasses with his teeth. That's why I'm thinking about getting Lasik. ... more

New science fiction convention in downtown Toronto: SFContario

Swatch Diane sez, We are starting up a shiny new SF convention in downtown Toronto, called SFContario. The inaugural convention will take place November 19-21st 2010 at the Ramada Plaza Hotel in downtown Toronto. It's a lovely hotel that overlooks Allan Gardens and is a stone's throw away from all the... more

Some half-formed thoughts on one future for bookselling

Swatch Clay Shirky's essay on the past and future of bookselling is provocative. I think he really nails something with his taxonomy of the reasons that people worry about bookstores, but I'm not sure I buy his conclusion -- that bookselling might be best served on an NPR/nonprofit model. In my experie... more

Soulful hymn to the "phantom phone"

Swatch Gnat sez, "YouTube video of national treasure/musician Tim O'Brien, singing his song about the phantom phone call syndrome. In the words of the song: You feel it vibrate, you reach for the cell But no one's there, that's how you tell Tim O'Brien: Phantom Phone (Thanks, Gnat!)... more

Sugru: polymer clay that fixes and sticks to pretty much everything

Swatch Sugru is a soft modelling clay that dries in 30 minutes at room-temp to a waterproof, heat/cold-resistant, dishwasher safe, flexible semi-solid. It's self-adhesive and bonds with many metals, glass, ceramic, plastics, etc. It can be used to make or fix or remake things from shoes to spectacles to ... more

Custom laser-engraved patent drawings on copper sheets

Swatch David and Hilary say, "Prior Art offers made-to-order engravings of patent illustrations in copper, aluminum, and brass. Thanks to the new Google Patents, the USPTO's database is now more accessible than ever. We're inviting customers to search that database for images that speak to them, then we... more

Win a $450 retro Ray watch

Our pals at Watchismo, purveyors of fine timepieces, have a competition for Boing Boing readers. "The Ray," a gorgeous retro wristwatch that costs $450, will be shipped to one entrant free of charge. All you have to do is give 'em an email address. And for everyone who doesn't win, there's a discoun... more

Hand-cranked penny-dispenser allows anyone to work for minimum wage

Swatch Blake Fall-Conroy's "Minimum Wage Machine" is a penny-dispensing Rube Goldberg machine that "allows anybody to work for minimum wage." Custom electronics, change sorter, wood, plexiglas, motor, misc. hardware, pennies (approx. 15 x 19 x 72 inches) The minimum wage machine allows anybody to work... more

Virtuoso cocktail shaker does his thing

Swatch Here's Japanese mixologist Kazuo Uyeda demonstrating his "hard shake" technique. Whatever he's mixing looks delicious. ginza hard shake (via Kottke) Previously:The Sweet Delirium of the Perfect Eggnog - Boing Boing Rube Goldberg cocktail-mixing machine - Boing Boing Halloween cocktail photos... more

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Comments
  • " I like to imagine that the artwork is still somehow safe underneath all that brown paint, and in a more enlightened time, it could be recovered. Still kind of a bummer, though, to be reminded that while garden variety graffiti is too common for the authorities to bother with, something with some artistic merit has got to be erased *immediately*. If she'd chosen a bird instead, would it have been allowed to stay?..."
  • "Ever seen ants tear apart a grasshopper? The ants always outnumber the grasshopper...."
  • "MIND = BLOWN..."
  • "Darwin speaks...."
  • "Xopher, you seem pretty cool. we should hang out...."
  • "Wow. I'm aware that Sherrif Joe is an outlier, but the whole mess reinforces my thankfullness we don't go in for elected law enforcement in Canada. Professional law enforcement f*cks up often enough, without adding populist nonsense into the mix like Joe does. I guess if Marikafka County gets bad enough, the FBI gets to come in, as they did on a few good-old-boy Southern sherrif's offices during various civil rights-related cases in the 60s?..."
  • "Short version: Mengele was too busy hiding to do much of anything else, and the twin rates are likely genetic. The town was formed by only 8 families, one of which carried a gene to have a lot of twins. It wasn't a bad watch, though they could have toned down the sensationalism a bit. I mean, one town with a twin rate a thousand times the world average probably ought to be investigated...."
  • "it's also easy to forget that only a few generations ago we were so polarized that our country literally declared war against itself. I'm kind of hoping that doesn't happen again. Although realistically, how many regular folks (as opposed to politicians) were actually willing to get into the Civil War?..."
  • "Good job Chris u gays stay together keep it up man ..."
  • "I think that opinions are becoming more polarized. It often seems that way, but it's also easy to forget that only a few generations ago we were so polarized that our country literally declared war against itself. I know plenty of people who didn't want Obama elected but I don't know any who would shoot me if they knew I voted for him. I also think that the idea that free speech leads to progress, although possible true, is still wishful thinking rather than established fact. Maybe not established fact b..."

 

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