Happy Mutant Profile
Carl Rigney
Update on Little Brother school/library donation program
May 13, 2008 12:02pm
Update on Little Brother school/library donation program
May 13, 2008 11:45am
@7 Learntolovethebomb, I'll buy two more copies and donate them to make up for you not buying one. So thanks for the motivation.
SMS data rate is 4x more expensive than data from the Hubble
May 12, 2008 8:51pm
Isn't 374.49/8.85 closer to 42 than 4.4?
Homeland Security charter school will train tomorrow's prison guards
May 10, 2008 11:37pm
Not to distract from the 130+ messages in progress, but I'm wondering if someone will sneak a copy of Little Brother into the DAPSS library. That'd be amusing.
Free Little Brother for librarians, teachers, etc -- a tipjar alternative for people who loved the free ebook
May 10, 2008 10:48pm
What a great idea! It would be handy to include phone numbers, though, because Amazon wants to know them in case there's a problem shipping. Google came to the rescue for the six copies I donated to the California requests.
As an unexpected bonus, my Amazon Prime (free two-day shipping for a year for one fee) covered all the shipping costs. Sweet!
Little Brother tour-schedule: Chicago, Milwaukee, Seattle, San Francisco, NYC
May 10, 2008 9:08pm
@19 Enochrewt, what are the odds that Tor and Cory will be at the Denver SF Worldcon in August, though?? Maybe Tor will arrange a signing at Tattered Cover while in town then?
It looks like Tattered Cover is only a mile away from the convention center, and there appears to be a free shuttle along 16th Street - handy for the pilgramage!
I'm looking forward to the SF area signings (heck, I'll buy a third copy of the book if I manage to make it to one), but one at 5:30pm and another at 7pm on the same day? "We're out of time here, guys, follow me to the other book store!"
Lastly, everyone remember to wear a red cape and goggles if you're going to blog about being at the signing. Nose lemons optional.
Chopping down trees to make books is good for the environment, provided you then line your walls with bookcases
April 20, 2008 6:24am
#11 Perhaps the two could be combined with a handy codpiece that holds a small book, thus providing both warmth for vital bits and a handy distraction when needed.
"Is that Little Brother in there or are you just happy to see me?"
Map of choose your own adventure book
March 8, 2008 3:53am
There's a book Finis that's just the horrible endings, 40 of them, starting with "You decide to read the book". Profits go to Katrina-related charities, so its subtitle is "A Book of Endings to Give People New Beginnings."
HOWTO Earn an artist's living in the 21st century: 1000 True Fans
March 4, 2008 10:41pm
I thought it was an excellent article, but then I'm a big believer in Seth Godin's views.
Jonathan Coulton seems to be doing pretty well with this approach, with people using his songs to post funny videos to Youtube, and others feeding off that creativity to do their own things, and then someone follows a link and buys a CD or MP3 online and shares it with friends and they ... and so on.
It's a lot easier to make a living from your art if you don't have to support a giant record company by paying for its executives' bloated salaries and for its lawyers to alienate your fans by treating them as criminals.
#14 has a good point about needing to build your tribe. I think there'll be room for intermediary companies (like LiveNation perhaps?) to take care of that sort of thing for artists that don't want to hassle with the details, but they'll be working for the artist, instead of treating the artist as a disposable face-of-the-year.
I think people want to give money to people whose work they enjoy, and they want to tell their friends who might also enjoy it. People want to belong, and they want what they do to matter. If the big media companies would give up some control and face the future instead of fighting it, maybe they could save themselves, and if not, things will move on over them.
Thanks for reading. We now return you to the monkey thread, already in progress.
Why free reading is important
March 2, 2008 2:25am
Another reason I don't recall seeing mentioned so far is that you can't grep dead goats. I have a copy of American Gods and the gorgeous Hill House limited edition with the author's preferred text, but if I wanted to find a quote or read the added scene with Jesus I'd have to read through the whole thing or at least skim it linearly.
If I had both versions in electronic form I could compare them easily, search for quotes if I only remember a couple of key words, all sorts of useful things.
So I applaud Harper Collins' first step at providing the book in free electronic form even if it's not in a form useful to me yet, and hope they'll be encouraged to do better, instead of going "ZOMG internet savages circle the wagons and ignore the future!"
Tor's free sample ebooks are in a more useful format, and Harper Collins could learn something from them.
Many roleplaying games are now available in both hardcopy and (usually) PDF, and in some cases you can buy both for one bundled price. I'd love to see that become more common.
I firmly believe that readers want to give money to their favorite authors, but that's hard if you don't know they're your favorite author yet!
Scissor mobile
February 29, 2008 11:23pm
Maybe he heard Gever Tulley's talk at TED 2007 on 5 dangerous things you should let your kids do.
I'm absurdly pleased at figuring a way to link TED into this thread, but it really was a fun talk.
Scissor mobile
February 29, 2008 7:53pm
Especially if you told the tale of the great long-legged scissormen who run in to cut off the thumbs of children who suck their thumbs.
Why does someone have that many scissors anyway? Do they work for the TSA?
Three trillion dollars - Nobel winning economist tabulates true cost of Iraq war
February 28, 2008 2:23am
It shouldn't really surprise anyone to think the US will still have troops in Iraq in 100 years. It's been over 100 years in the Phillipines, right? 60+ years for Japan and Germany, almost 60 in South Korea.
Privacy urinals
February 20, 2008 8:46pm
Isn't that what alleys are for in the UK?
Important safety tips are covered in the Sims2 training video "Male Restroom Etiquette".
Bush administration wants Europeans' family details, the right to put armed officials on European planes, and a pre-approval for European visitors
February 20, 2008 12:45am
And not just overflight. If the plane were hijacked then it could threaten anywhere it could reach, so every country should have the right to put armed air marshals on any plane that can reach them.
Now the A380's 853-passenger capacity looks like a good idea!
On the plus side, the more trouble air travel becomes, the less carbon emitted, so maybe it'll all be for the best.
I think we have to draw the line at transparent TSA-approved clothing without pockets, though.
TED pass on eBay
February 5, 2008 6:07am
After 39 bids by 14 bidders the pass went for $33,850 to alanr0776, a new ebay account.
Shepard Fairey's Obama poster
January 31, 2008 11:54pm
"Progress" also fits across the bottom better than "Hope". The propaganda effect of the use of red and blue is quite nice (see how Progress is all in blue?). I wonder if it'll start showing up at rallies and meetups. Very nice design.
@#4, "Hope is not a feeling. Hope is not the belief that things will turn out well, but the conviction that what we are doing make sense, no matter how things turn out." -- Vaclav Havel
FBI buries docs showing US officials stole nuke secrets?
January 20, 2008 7:15am
William Langewiesche's excellent book on Pakistan's nuclear program just came out in May 2007, The Atomic Bazaar: The Rise of the Nuclear Poor.
Sadly, Seymour Hersh's 1991 book The Samson Option: Israel's Nuclear Arsenal & American Foreign Policy appears to be out of print. It documents at length who knew what when, and how the CIA came to understand it shouldn't tell the president things he didn't want to hear, even back in the 60s.
p180: "It was widely believed, the Israeli added, that the first warhead had the following phrase welded, in Hebrew and English, onto its exterior: NEVER AGAIN."
I recommend both of the above highly. Does anyone know of equivalent books about India, South Africa, or possibly Brazil's programs?
I haven't read Richard Rhodes' trilogy The Making of the Atomic Bomb, Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb, and recent Arsenals of Folly: The Making of the Nuclear Arms Race, but would like to get to them someday.
The technically inclined may also enjoy Robert Serber's The Los Alamos Primer: The First Lectures on How To Build an Atomic Bomb.
Half a million rubber balls down the Spanish steps in Rome
January 16, 2008 8:08pm
The link says it was a quarter-million, which is still enough to fill 2200 square feet 2 feet deep according to this handy ball fill calculator.
Now for "The Running of the Balls", in which people start out running ahead of them, in a fun hybrid of xkcd and Pamplona. That might be even more fun with superballs than playpit balls.
As someone once scribbled on a whiteboard at the MIT Media Lab, "Art is not a mirror. Art is a hammer."
Heads up car nav system uses virtual cable to guide drivers
January 11, 2008 1:18pm
BMW 5-series has an optional Head Up Display that can show the arrows for its (excellent) GPS Navigation system, but it's only on a portion of the window. Its optional night vision doesn't display in the HUD (yet).
They also have optional systems to tell you when you're leaving your lane (if it can tell) and an "active cruise control" to slow if the car you're following is slowing. The user manual is packed with warnings "But you're still driving the car and its your responsibility."
An interesting demo film at their website shows possible plans for a future wifi network between cars so one BMW can tell a trailing BMW about changing weather conditions, traffic slowdowns, and cops violating the 4th amendment with checkpoints. (OK, they didn't actually mention that last one.)
Eventually the technology will filter down into less expensive cars, the way anti-lock brakes and airbags did.
Neil Gaiman on Little Brother
January 3, 2008 8:37pm
I had high hopes for Little Brother after hearing Cory read the first chapter at a convention, but it exceeded my expectations. I just finished the advanced reading copy I won in the icommons auction, and it was worth every penny. I feel pretty safe in saying it's the best book I'll read this year. It's a gripping story about likable characters being pushed hard and pushing back smartly.
But I'm over 25 so don't trust me, read it for yourself when it comes out in May. I'll be buying extra copies then to give to friends so they can pass them along to others.
Scroogled in Latvian, Italian, Portuguese
December 11, 2007 7:38pm
But where's the LOLCAT translation??
And inevitably, Klingon.
Story: SR-71 Pilots Show Off
November 22, 2007 12:14am
I didn't get the chance to go there on this trip, but the Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville, Oregon southwest of Portland says it has an SR-71 on display, along with the Spruce Goose, and an IMAX film about the Spruce Goose. I hope to visit it someday.
SF magazines' circulation numbers in sad decline
October 22, 2007 7:46pm
I'd suspect the dominance of stories from Analog and Asimov's in the Hugo awards is because those are voted on by members of the Worldcon, who in turn are often the sort of people who still read those magazines. (Which is not to say that they're not fine stories, or that the editors are wrong to select stories that appeal to the readers they have.) (Disclaimer: I don't subscribe to either, although I did read all the nominees online to cast an informed ballot last year.)
I've been thinking about the decline of the hardcopy SF short story market, compared to the exponential growth in anime fandom. As technology and networks have made it easier to download video, subtitle it, and share it, there's been huge growth in Anime fandom, which in turn supports companies to license and publish DVDs in English, because when you love something it's very natural to want to give someone money for it so they'll make more of that. It's trivially easy to point someone you think might like a show at a way of getting it, or burn a DVD with 2 dozen first episodes to sample.
But if I like a short story on paper, I have to loan the physical object to someone I want to check it out, then wait for them to get around to reading it and returning it before I can share it with another friend.
And there are very active online communities of fans discussing anime (and manga), with lots of info sharing. "Oh, you loved 12 Kingdoms? Then try Saiunkoku Monogatari!" Interaction breeds excitement and you get 30,000 people gathering to reinforce their sense of community.
Meanwhile, maybe 3000 people gather at a SF con to re-enact their wistful dreams of an age in which rockets mattered, and go to panels about their fears for the future.
I do both, but I can see which one is moving forward. Teenagers can be annoying, but they have a lot of energy!
Joe Torre and the psychology of persuasion
October 22, 2007 7:13pm
I like Robert Cialdini's Influence: Science and Practice (4th edition) so much I carry an extra copy in my car to give to friends. I discovered it from the recommendation of Charlie Munger of Berkshire Hathaway. Have you ever done something someone asked you to, and afterwards wondered why? Read this book and find out.
I'm excited to hear he has another book coming out, I'll look forward to reading it.
AntiPhormLite confounds BT's spyware by simulating random browsing
May 15, 2008 7:59pm
HOWTO keep your laptop's data out of customs' hands
May 15, 2008 2:51pm
Boing Boing's Moderation Policy
March 27, 2008 10:48am
BBtv - Cory Doctorow: Show us your "Little Brother" HOWTO videos, and "Dumpster-Diving Philosopher."
May 14, 2008 8:20am
Update on Little Brother school/library donation program
May 13, 2008 4:42am
Gallery of data-centers built into shipping containers -- Boing Boing Gadgets
May 12, 2008 3:06pm
HOWTO handle a police-stop
May 12, 2008 3:02pm
Little Brother downloads are live!
May 5, 2008 4:32am
Young adult sections in bookstore -- a parallel universe of little-regarded awesomeness
May 1, 2008 9:05am
Email ninjitsu revealed
April 29, 2008 2:27pm
Little Brother audiobook: DRM-free and remixable!
April 29, 2008 7:00am
NYPD cops videoed illegally warring on photographers
April 28, 2008 8:43pm
Death of the sitcom frees up 2,000 Wikipedias worth of cognitive capacity
April 27, 2008 4:52am
Copyright crazies gaining steam in Canada
April 26, 2008 5:21am
MSN Music customers lose *all* their music the next time they buy a new PC
April 22, 2008 8:02pm
Bush administration: Fourth Amendment doesn't apply to domestic military operations
April 2, 2008 10:59am
Declassified memo authorized US to torture "enemy combatants"
April 2, 2008 12:18am
Free bulk-scanning, OCR and web-publishing service launched by Scribd
April 1, 2008 4:55am
Hackers publish thousands of copies of fingerprint of German Minister who promotes fingerprint biometrics
April 1, 2008 1:22am
Social worker befriends mugger
March 28, 2008 9:49am
Slides from wonderful "engineering climate change" talk
March 26, 2008 11:38pm
Bell Canada caught throttling ISPs' net connections
March 26, 2008 5:04am
Boing Boing tv - Filk, folk music for science fiction fans.
March 26, 2008 7:41am
Free stories from a Campbell Award nominee
March 25, 2008 7:39am
In the age of ebooks, you don't own your library
March 23, 2008 2:04am
Sequoia Voting Systems threatens Felten's Princeton security research team
March 17, 2008 8:46pm
Tibet: China blocks YouTube, protests spread, bloggers react
March 16, 2008 9:50am
House votes against telcom immunity for illegal wiretapping
March 15, 2008 11:33am
Fingertip biometrics at Disney turnstiles: the Mouse does its bit for the police state
March 15, 2008 3:27am
RIAA's unethical investigations to be dragged into the open in court case
March 14, 2008 12:34pm
My Life With Master: "As seminal to RPGs as Frankenstein was for literature"
March 11, 2008 11:55am
Heathrow Terminal 5 to fingerprint domestic passengers
March 7, 2008 11:36pm
L Ron Hubbard plagiarized Scientology?
February 27, 2008 3:29am
Lori Nix's tabletop photography
February 12, 2008 11:21am
Security vs. Privacy is really Control vs. Liberty
January 28, 2008 10:41pm
RU Sirius on pranksters and tricksters
January 28, 2008 9:13am
MPAA's University wiretapping product taken down for violating copyright
December 3, 2007 10:42pm
No friends yet.


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