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Videographer: Commissioned artist and friend of Eyebeam, Jason Jones of Not An Alternative

Videographer: Commissioned artist and friend of Eyebeam, Jason Jones of Not An Alternative

Videographer: Commissioned artist and friend of Eyebeam, Jason Jones of Not An Alternative

Videographer: Commissioned artist and friend of Eyebeam, Jason Jones of Not An Alternative

Videographer: Commissioned artist and friend of Eyebeam, Jason Jones of Not An Alternative

Videographer: Commissioned artist and friend of Eyebeam, Jason Jones of Not An Alternative

Videographer: Commissioned artist and friend of Eyebeam, Jason Jones of Not An Alternative

Videographer: Commissioned artist and friend of Eyebeam, Jason Jones of Not An Alternative

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The Eyebeam reBlog is a community site focused on art, technology, and culture. The guest reBlogger is filtering feeds provided by artists, curators, bloggers, and news sites. With the touch of a button the reBlogger selects material to share with the Eyebeam community.
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May 02, 2008
Olinda

Olinda

At This happened in March, Jack from Schulze & Webb gave a presentation on the development of Olinda, a prototype commissioned by BBC Audio & Music Interactive R&D. Olinda has now arrived and it looks fantastic…

“Olinda is a prototype digital radio that has your social network built in, showing you the stations your friends are listening to. It’s customisable with modular hardware, and aims to provoke discussion on the future and design of radios for the home.”

Olinda

“Six lights on Olinda show when a close friend is listening to the radio, using wifi and Radio Pop, the BBC’s website for sharing ‘now playing’ information. Each light is a button: you can tune in to listen along with them, discovering new stations via your social network.”

Olinda

Additional hardware modules can be snapped on to the base unit . This allows further expansion of the radio through purchased modules or possibly consumer created hardware. Examples of possibly modules included in the pdf.

“The hardware interface is made a feature with sprung copper connectors, and magnets mounted in rounded guides pull the modules together to a solid whole. It’s kept visible behind a clear, orange cap, and begs to be used.”

Olinda

Olinda has two dials to tune: the outer scroll stations alphabetically; the inner one scrolls only your most listened.

Olinda

The process of research, design and development that Olinda went through is a really interesting story. Soon we will put up a video of the This happened talk, but additional information & design detail can be found in the pdf pamphlet.

Unfortunately they are not for sale as the BBC don’t sell consumer hardware, however…

“Olinda is a design prototype. Conventionally, the implementations of and protocols behind concepts like the hardware API, social sharing of listening and other novelties developed for this radio might attract intellectual property protection.

To encourage development of these ideas, the BBC has agreed to waive certain rights, following a pattern which has proved successful on the Web, there called the ‘Creative Commons Attribution License’. This licence allows for sharing and remixing of a work, provided the original author is credited in the derivative work. It means remixing is supported without requiring any lengthy negotiations or discussion.”

I’m really pleased that the BBC commissioned this work as S&W have done a really fine job. Creating it under a more open licence is even better.

Olinda

Originally posted by Chris OShea from Pixelsumo, ReBlogged by GOOD on May 2, 2008 at 03:41 PM
Greensburg, Kansas Resident Offers Insider's View

greensburg-kansas.jpg View from a grain elevator in Greensburg. Nearly all of the town's buildings were destroyed or heavily damaged by the May 4, 2007 tornado.
The middle of nowhere and the center of everything. That is how it feels in Greeensburg, Kansas right now. May 4 (Sunday) is the anniversary of the storm that destroyed the town. It is a bit surreal all that has occurred in the past year. And this week just seems reflective of that year. A multitude of media outlets from around the world is in town and the President is coming to speak and acknowledge the success of the recovery. There are over 30 buildings being rebuilt to exemplary levels of energy efficiency and green buildi...


Originally posted by Treehugger from Protein® -, ReBlogged by GOOD on May 2, 2008 at 03:39 PM
Visualising your social networks

We've blogged before about tools for visualising social networks, for instance who met who at a conference and this tool to visualise election donations, and written about analyses of whole country's social networks. It was only a matter of time before these technologies made their way onto sites like Facebook and MySpace, and sure enough there's now a piece of software called Nexus which draws network graphs of your Facebook friends.Each friend is represented by a black dot, and the software draws lines showing who is friends with who, then darkens the lines when people also have interests in common. Another app called Visualiser does something similar, but with a far less useful display and fewer options.Baring my soul, here are Nexus' representations of my friendset:I find the second style much more intuitive, but the first one throws up some interesting results. You can see that there are several big clusters, which are unsurprising: schoolfriends, university friends and so forth.However it splits my university friends into several clusters, which as far as I can see don't correspond to their real-life groupings. In other words it's good at pinning down which groups of people all know each other, but despite taking loads of data on activities and interests it can't spot the strong friendship groups within those clusters.I would really like to apply this sort of network analysis to a Facebook group (the New Scientist group for instance). I'm interested to find out how linked the members are, and what shape the network takes.Is the group spreading by word of mouth (and thus strongly linked) or just by people searching for us? Unfortunately none of the apps I've found can be applied to a group, so I'm thwarted (FriendWebs claims to, but I can't get it to work). If anyone knows a way to do this, let us know!Lastly, while playing with these applications I discovered one that should appeal to scientists everywhere. MyTypicalFriend runs through your list of friends, their interests and so forth, and calculates your average friend, simplifying the whole complicated socialising thing no end. This is apparently my typical friend:Michael Marshall has reduced friendship to a list of middle-of-the-road attributes

Originally posted by New Scientist from Protein® -, ReBlogged by GOOD on May 2, 2008 at 03:36 PM
Libelula rocket-powered helicopter backpack redefines danger

Filed under: ,


Sure, you can get yourself a personal helicopter or, if you're particularly daring, a jet pack, but what about those that crave yet more danger in short 30-second bursts? As in, rocket-propelled helicopter blades a few inches from your head-type danger. Thankfully, the folks at Tecnologia Aeroespacial Mexicana (makes of some of the aforementioned jet packs) have come to the rescue (so to speak), with their latest high-flying concept, the Libelula rocket-powered helicopter backpack. Apparently, the rockets on the tips of the blades are necessary to keep the whole rig counter-balanced, a job that would normally be done with a tail rotor on an ordinary helicopter. Of course, as you can no doubt surmise by the detailed illustration above, this one's still a ways away from getting its first test flight, but the folks at TAM do have a proven track record, so we wouldn't put it completely past 'em to get it off the drawing board sooner or later.

[Via Tech Digest]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Originally posted by Donald Melanson from Engadget, ReBlogged by GOOD on May 2, 2008 at 03:32 PM
The First Billion-Dollar Home
The world's first billion-dollar home, commissioned for a petrochemical tycoon (surprise!) from India, will be a 27-story skyscraper in downtown Mumbai. Forbes mentions that hanging hydroponic gardens that "lower the energy footprint" of the house by absorbing heat and sunlight will dot the exterior of the first six floors. All of which, incidentally, are devoted to parking.

There's a slideshow here and an article here.

Via Archinect.
Posted by GOOD at 03:32 PM
May 01, 2008
Electric Uno Bike: A Clean Commute?
unobike.jpg A young Canadian inventor named Ben Gulak has created an innovative new electric motorbike that takes some of the lessons learned from the Segway device, but implements them in cooler package. The bike, called the Uno, looks from its profile like a strange powered unicycle but actually employs two wheels side-by-side. Riders lean forward to accelerate -- a feature used by the Segway, and can hit a top speed of 25 mph in its current configuration. The Uno also makes use of a set of gyros to enhance ease of balance, and the wheels are independently operated making turning much more precise. ...

Originally from TreeHugger, ReBlogged by GOOD on May 1, 2008 at 03:34 PM
Vote for your favorite public intellectuals

Not to be outdone by the Time 100, the journals Foreign Policy and Prospect have together released a list of the Top 100 public intellectuals -- with voting. Many TEDTalks favorites appear on the list, and you can help choose the eventual top 20 by voting for your very own top 5. From Foreign Policy's site:

Although the men and women on this list are some of the world’s most sophisticated thinkers, the criteria to make the list could not be more simple. Candidates must be living and still active in public life. They must have shown distinction in their particular field as well as an ability to influence wider debate, often far beyond the borders of their own country.

TEDTalks speakers on this top 100 list include George Ayittey, Steven Pinker, Neil Gershenfeld, Malcolm Gladwell, Craig Venter, Al Gore, Richard Dawkins, Vilayanur Ramachandran, Larry Lessig, Steven Levitt, E.O. Wilson, Dan Dennett and Bjorn Lomborg -- and look for upcoming TEDTalks from others on this list, including Paul Collier, who spoke at TED2008 about "the bottom billion."

See the full list of 100 >>

Originally posted by from TED | TEDBlog, ReBlogged by GOOD on May 1, 2008 at 03:34 PM
Smog Eating Eco House in Cyprus

Iosa Ghini Associati, Cyprus, modern architecture in Cyprus, photo-catalytic concrete, anti-smog architecture, Mediterranean architecture, modern architecture in Cyprus, sustainable design, Iosa2

This striking modern structure cuts a profile every bit as sleek as it is streamlined for efficiency. It is composed of four single family units joined by a flowing fusion of glass and “smog-eating” photo-catalytic concrete, creating a series of separate yet structurally connected spaces. Italian architects Iosa Ghini Associati designed the residence to integrate seamlessly into its sweeping Mediterranean landscape, and its airy day-lit interiors benefit from a slick set of green features including adjustable solar panels, rainwater recycling, and a heat storage system.

(more…)

Originally posted by Mike Chino from INHABITAT, ReBlogged by GOOD on May 1, 2008 at 03:21 PM
How Deep Is The Earth's Crust Under Europe?
A new model of Europe's Earth's crust has been made. The Earth's crust is, on global average around 40 kilometers deep. In relation to the total diameter of the Earth with approx. 12800 kilometers this appears to be rather shallow, but precisely these upper kilometers of the crust, the human habitat, is of special interest for us. Europe's crust shows an astonishing diversity: for example the crust under Finland is as deep as one only expects for crust under a mountain range such as the Alps.
April 30, 2008
Decoding The Dictionary: Lexicon Evolved To Fit In The Brain, Study Suggests
The latest edition of the Oxford English Dictionary boasts 22,000 pages of definitions. While that may seem far from succinct, new research suggests the reference manual is meticulously organized to be as concise as possible -- a format that mirrors the way our brains make sense of and categorize the countless words in our vast vocabulary.
The Final Jeopardy blog posts a video each day's Final...

The Final Jeopardy blog posts a video each day's Final Jeopardy question. (thx, daniel)

(link)
Originally posted by jason@kottke.org from kottke.org, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 30, 2008 at 09:58 PM
EO Wilson and Elizabeth Kolbert in conversation

EO-Wilson-with-book.jpg

Thursday night at Town Hall, the Natural Resources Defense Council presented E.O. Wilson interviewed by the author and New Yorker staff writer Elizabeth Kolbert. Father of biodiversity, "Darwin's Natural Heir", Pulitzer Prize winner, author of 25 books, ecologist, and humanist...


Originally posted by Treehugger from Protein® -, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 30, 2008 at 09:56 PM
Xerox Demos Self-Erasing, Eco-Friendly Paper
Lucas123 writes "The same Xerox lab that brought us Ethernet, the GUI and the mouse has demonstrated paper that can be reused after printed text automatically deletes itself from its surface in a day. Instead of trashing or recycling after one use, a single piece of paper can be reused up to 100 times. 'The paper contains specially coded molecules that create a print after being exposed to ultraviolet light emitted from a thin bar in a printer. The ultraviolet bar itself is very small, so it can be used in mobile printers. The technology could also be useful for network printing.'"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally posted by ScuttleMonkey from Slashdot, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 30, 2008 at 09:56 PM
"Island" Of Trash Update
A while back we posted about the Texas-sized "island" of trash floating in the Pacific Ocean, and marveled that there weren't pictures of the monstrosity. Now we have them, thanks to the folks at Vice. They hired a boat and struck out for the North Pacific Gyre, the vortex of currents where the trash apparently accumulates. Check out the 12-part "Garbage Island" video series. In episode nine they enter the gyre. What they encounter is an "unfathomable bummer." The trash hasn't gathered in a huge, amalgamated mass (this rumor was always a little suspect). That would have been a big problem, but one with clear boundaries. Instead, limitless volumes of plastic scraps are dispersed throughout the ocean, hopelessly entangled with the natural environment. It's bad news, we know, but worth confronting. Via PSFK.
Originally posted by andrewprice from Good Magazine:, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 30, 2008 at 09:52 PM
April 29, 2008
Consume®econnection Project
For his 30th birthday last month, New Yorker Scott Ballum embarked on the Consume®econnection Project, a year-long effort to meet the people who make the stuff he buys. For everything he consumes, Scott wants to establish a personal connection with someone along the production chain, be it a designer, a factory worker, or even a trucker. He's chronicling the experience online. Barely two months in, Scott has already encountered some obstacles, but a recent trip to the Maker's Mark distillery in Loretto, Kentucky was rewarding. We'll be following the project with interest. The Maker's Mark distillery in Loretto, Kentucky When we finally snuck away from the pimento cheese finger sandwiches and headed towards some buildings not on the tour, we found ourselves approaching a tall, burly fellow in a brown MM sweatshirt, work boots, and well-worn cowboy hat. A Godsend. Jude is a barrel-roller. He is one of about 18 guys who rolls empty barrels off trucks from the warehouse into the cistern, where they are filled with whiskey ready to become bourbon, and then rolls the full barrels back onto another truck to go back to the warehouse. 360 barrels a day, each one 150 pounds empty, 500+ pounds full. But as Jude put it, "It's not so bad, you let the whiskey do the work." Given that all of the Maker's Mark Bourbon in the world is distilled in Loretto, and that Jude is one of only eighteen people who move these barrels, there's a high likelihood that much of the Maker's I've consumed in bars or at home, and will continue to consume, was aged in barrels he's rolled. Vats of bourbon
Originally posted by andrewprice from Good Magazine:, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 29, 2008 at 04:15 PM
Punk'd: Fine Art Edition
In "The Tuymans Experiment," the acclaimed Belgian painter Luc Tuymans and some art-world collaborators punk the plebes. The painter—whose work sells for millions at auction and whose importance is, we're assured, beyond dispute—paints a mural on a busy Antwerp street. A hidden camera records whether passersby stop to appreciate the work of a master. It's a thought-provoking video. We're all for public art, and the modest Tuymans is a good sport. But, when only 4% of passersby stop, the narrator hopes that "these numbers will wake people up...[to] take more interest in art." We're a little uncomfortable with the suggestion that a busy student, or surgeon, or postal worker, is obligated to stop just because a Tuymans painting is there. After all, people routinely walk past entire museums full of art for perfectly good reasons. Just for fun, we'd be curious to try the opposite experiment: take a painter without critical credentials, put them in a respected gallery, and secretly tape the praise of the aesthetes. Thanks, Noella.
Originally posted by andrewprice from Good Magazine:, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 29, 2008 at 04:15 PM
Telephonic sheep
Artist unknown, via Cualquiera.com.

Originally posted by Paul Schmelzer from Eyeteeth: A journal of incisive ideas., ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 29, 2008 at 04:14 PM
John Cleese visits Laughing Club in India

Actor John Cleese went to India to visit a doctor who has started a laughing club. The people meet each morning and do silly things to make each other laugh. Laughter has many health benefits, says the doctor. I believe it.

Previously on Boing Boing:
Laughter yoga
Laughing yogi video


Originally posted by Mark Frauenfelder from Boing Boing, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 29, 2008 at 04:10 PM
Colossal squid goes under knife
Scientists are set to begin dissecting New Zealand's rare, intact colossal squid specimen.
April 28, 2008
Mural Dishwasher by Lacasse and Savard

uqam-washer.jpg

I previously admired this horizontal eco dishwasher concept by Marie-Christine Lacasse & Marie Claude Savard, seen at the University of Quebec in Montreal Design Grad Show, but only had the video.

I am particularly fascinated by it because I used to try and get clients to install two dishwashers, which would act as storage as the dishes just went from one to another. This would save cupboard space, the work emptying the dishwasher and energy, as you don't run it until all of the dishes are moved from one to the other and it is full. This wall-unit design is a much more elegant solution.

Mocoloco's Eric Demay p...


Originally posted by Treehugger from Protein® -, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 28, 2008 at 01:38 PM
Measuring Genuine Progress

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was first used in the United Kingdom to measure their war-time production. Since the whole economy was geared up to wage war, it was a fair measure of how much the system was turning over.

While the second world war has finished, GDP is peculiarly still the measurement system of choice for economic performance, measuring crime, environmental destruction and catastrophes at the same value as activity that leads to genuine growth. Furthermore, countries of the world are "ranked" as "developed" or "developing" based on GDP - an additional system built on top of an inappropriate one.

But as they say, money can't buy happiness, at least once you're over the poverty line. Happiness is a much harder equation than GDP, and something that global systems don't spend a lot of time concerning themselves with fulfilling today.

So a number of systems have emerged over the years to quantify economic and social growth; alternative equations to GDP that account for more than just the value of traded goods. We've written a lot about this debate here on Worldchanging, from measuring inclusive wealth, green economics, ecological economics to different ways of valuing nature and understanding social production (what Yochai Benkler called the Wealth of Networks).

The Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI)

The GPI is an alternative accounting system that internalises what are normally considered externalised costs. The result is, ideally, a measurement system that accounts for the true and full values - positive and negative - of activity inside a given economic system.


Income Distribution
GDP can show how the total personal income of a nation grows - but not how the income is distributed. What's unwritten here is that a wide income distribution is favored by the measurement system - a good thing for the left but maybe not something everyone can agree on (yet).

Housework, Volunteering, and Higher Education
Since GDP only measures monetary trade, it ignores the value of un-paid work entirely - some of the most significant work to drive society like household work. With the emerging tools of Web 2.0 and increased online participation (most of it for no pecuniary gain), this sector of the economy will only become more valuable in the coming decades.

Crime
Violence that results in hospital bills is good for the economy, or at least, leads to a greater GDP. Proponents of GPI say that crime-related growth is not valuable, and don't count it as positive in GPI measurements.

Resource Depletion
If today’s economic activity depletes the physical resource base available for tomorrow, then it is not creating well-being; rather, it is borrowing it from future generations. The GDP counts such borrowing as current income. The GPI, by contrast, counts the depletion or degradation of wetlands, forests, farmland, and nonrenewable minerals (including oil) as a current cost.
Re-Defining Progress

Pollution
Pollution is one of the most common examples of the GDP system's failure, and in fact benefits twice from pollution. In the event of an oil spill, GDP systems appear to benefit first by having a tanker there in the first place, then secondly by spending money cleaning up the mess it leaves behind. Proponents of a GPI system say that cleaning up should be counted as a positive - but that its creation in the first place can only be negative.

Long-Term Environmental Damage
Coal mines are difficult to return to their previous (usually forested) state. GPI systems do not allow the creation of coal mines to add value, since they destroy pieces of the environment that may never be restored.

Changes in Leisure Time
Since leisure time has no economic value to GDP, it can go completely un-noticed. Under a GPI system, leisure time can be valued appropriately.

Defensive Expenditures
The GPI counts defensive expenditures as a cost rather than a benefit - a debatable presumption, but one that aims for a better world.

Lifespan of Consumer Durables & Public Infrastructure
One massive criticism of GDP is that it encourages products that break and get replaced (by more products that break). Instead, the GPI considers the lifetime of an appliance, tool or other such "durable" to be an indication of its quality, and values high quality infrastructure and goods favourably against those that would fail us.
Why would we want a system that encouraged poor stuff?

Dependence on Foreign Assets
I'm not sure what I think here - because I'm in to globalisation. The idea is that borrowing money from other countries is living beyond your means - but if these loans are paid back with interest... it might be one of the few cases of where our existing monetary infrastructure (at least systemically) works. (International loans are often made with unfair conditions, but that's another story)

None of these facets are simple to measure, even alone. The system could use some modification in all areas to be taken seriously by anyone other than idealists.

The outcome when successfully measured is that GPI presents a much more detailed picture of how a society is getting on in total, where it's rich and where it is poor.

But there's an even simpler system of quantifying well-being and progress...

Happiness

Enter Jigme Singye Wangchuck, the fourth king of Bhutan, famous for introducing the concept of Gross National Happiness (GNH). GNH is intended to be a measure of overall well-being within a country, and is comprised of seven very sensible components.

1. Economic satisfaction (savings, debt and purchase power)
2. Environmental satisfaction: (pollution, noise and traffic)
3. Workplace satisfaction (job satisfaction, motivation, ethics, conflict, etc.)
4. Physical health (Severe illnesses, overweight,..)
5. Mental health (usage of antidepressants, self-esteem, positive outlook..)
6. Social satisfaction [including family and relationship satisfaction] (domestic disputes, communication, support, sex, discrimination, safety, divorce rates, complaints of domestic conflicts and family lawsuits, public lawsuits, crime rates, etc.)
7. Political satisfaction (quality of local democracy, individual freedom, and foreign conflicts, etc.)

International Institute of Management

It's hard to disagree with this list, and imagining a world that prides itself on the seven factors is quite enticing. While there's only so much involvement you might want the state to have in your social satisfaction, it can't be a bad thing for your country to measure its total contribution to the world with a system that includes workplace satisfaction and environmental health.

GNH is measured by surveys, with a wide and representative sample of participants giving information about their satisfaction in each area.


It's true that any good governance concerns itself with more than just GDP. But use of GDP to determine success, even financial success, is short-sighted and often wasteful. Going backwards isn't valuable, so we shouldn't treat it as such.


Image: Cheers Flickr/jaja_1985!

Bonus link: Dr Ron Colman, GPI proponent, interview on Radio New Zealand.

Help us change the world - DONATE NOW!

(Posted by Craig Neilson in Columns at 11:00 PM)

Originally posted by Craig Neilson from WorldChanging, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 28, 2008 at 01:33 PM
Solar Thermal Power in North-Africa: How Much Land to Power the World?
Solar Thermal Power photo Spiegel Online published a series of pictures titled "Desertec: Strom aus der Wüste" (translation: Desertech: Electricity from the desert). It includes this image of how much land would be needed to power the world, Europe or Germany with solar-thermal power. The idea is similar to a post we did a year ago: How Much Land to Power The Whole World with Solar? The red square on the left is for the whole world, in the middle for Europe-25, and on the right for Germany. Below you can see pictures of the kind of technology they're talking about. It's a bit similar to
Originally from TreeHugger, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 28, 2008 at 01:29 PM
April 25, 2008
Bloomframe folding balcony

folding-balcony.jpg
folding-balcony-closed.jpg

I'm not entirely sure how a folding balcony is superior to one that doesn't fold, considering you're not really saving interior space, and presumably there's sufficient space on the outside to expand out the balcony. Still, the award-winning Bloomframe by Hofman Dujardin Architects is rather cool. Apparently, the idea came about in response to the new-found popularity of balconies in Sweden. Bloomframe balconies can be added to existing buildings or made part of the design of new buildings, and are basically innovative window frames that can be pushed out to form an exterior balconies, expanding your interior space to the outdoors.

Via Smart Stuff.



Posted by lydia    Category: design | home
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Originally posted by lydia from Popgadget: Personal Tech for Women, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 25, 2008 at 09:50 PM
Canühome Unveiled at Green Living Show

canuhome-interior.jpg

After World War II, Edward Larabee Barnes, Henry Dreyfuss and Bucky Fuller all tried to use aircraft technology and ideas to build housing but it never took off, so to speak. Perhaps their mistake was modelling it after the wrong planes, going with metal, instead of looking at the Mosquito and building it out of plywood.

I am not certain if that is where the inspiration for the canühome came from, but the designers have used the latest CNC technology and a lot of other ideas that make it one of the more interesting test beds w...


Originally posted by Treehugger from Protein® -, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 25, 2008 at 09:48 PM
The One Day Poem Pavilion uses the sun to display...

The One Day Poem Pavilion uses the sun to display a poem one line at a time over the course of an entire day. (via stingy kids)

(link)
Originally posted by jason@kottke.org from kottke.org, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 25, 2008 at 09:41 PM
[Untitled]

ob07.jpg ob01.jpg

From the series “Items” by Thomas Mailaender.

Originally posted by mail from VVORK, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 25, 2008 at 09:39 PM
Dodged A Bullet
Remember a year or two ago when President Bush really wanted to push through a plan to partially privatize social security so your retirement stash could flourish with the ever-effervescent stock market? Remember how he couldn't sell the initiative to the public and it got axed? As Robert Reich points out, we really dodged a bullet with that one.
Originally posted by andrewprice from Good Magazine:, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 25, 2008 at 03:06 AM
Nothing But Nets
The United Nations Foundation's Nothing But Nets is an organization you can count on in crunch time. It delivers much needed bed nets that protect people from Malaria mosquitoes. In honor of World Malaria Day (tomorrow), it's launched a campaign to increase the number of nets it distributes. All you have to do is play this awesome (and free) interactive game and a net will be delivered in your name. Simple. Effective. Fun. You can take a look at a slide show of real world distribution here and, should you feel so inclined, offer a traditional financial donation here.
Originally posted by Patrick James from Good Magazine:, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 25, 2008 at 03:06 AM
Jared Diamond on vengeance
In the current New Yorker, anthropologist Jared Diamond, author of Guns, Germs, and Steel and Collapse, looks at the vengeance practices of tribal societies in New Guinea. While Diamond was conducting field work in the New Guinea Highlands, he was driven around by a young man named Daniel Wemp of the Handa clan. The two got to talking and Daniel recounted how he avenged the death of his uncle who had been killed by the neighboring Ombal clan. The tale is amazing, insightful, and gets you thinking about our own, er, taste for revenge. From the New Yorker article, titled "Vengeance Is Ours":
The war between the Handa clan and the Ombal clan began many years ago; how many, Daniel didn’t say, and perhaps didn’t know. It could easily have been several decades ago, or even in an earlier generation. Among Highland clans, each killing demands a revenge killing, so that a war goes on and on, unless political considerations cause it to be settled, or unless one clan is wiped out or flees. When I asked Daniel how the war that claimed his uncle’s life began, he answered, “The original cause of the wars between the Handa and Ombal clans was a pig that ruined a garden.” Surprisingly to outsiders, most Highland wars start ostensibly as a dispute over either pigs or women. Anthropologists debate whether the wars really arise from some deeperlying ultimate cause, such as land or population pressure, but the participants, when they are asked to name a cause, usually point to a woman or a pig. Any Westerner who knows the story of Helen and the Trojan War will not be surprised to hear women named as a casus belli, but the equal importance of pigs is less obvious. However, New Guinea Highlanders, whose main food staples are starchy root crops like sweet potato and taro, are chronically starved for protein, of which the island’s dark, bristly pigs traditionally furnished the only large source. As a result, pigs are prized symbols of prestige and wealth. Peaceful competition and ostentatious displays involve pigs, and they are also used as currency for buying women. Pigs are individually owned and named, and, as piglets, they are sometimes nursed at one breast by a woman nursing an infant at her other breast.

A typical Highland village is a cluster of huts housing between a few dozen and a few hundred people plus their pigs, traditionally surrounded by a fence, and situated a mile or a few miles from the next village. A village’s pigs are taken out to forage during the day, and are prone then to wander into people’s vegetable gardens, breaking down or digging under fences erected to keep them out. A single pig can root up and ruin an entire garden in a few hours. If the intrusion happens at night, or if the offending pig is not caught in the act, it is virtually impossible to prove which particular pig was responsible.

That was how the Handa-Ombal war began. An Ombal man found that his garden had been wrecked by a pig. He claimed that the offending pig belonged to a certain Handa man, who denied it. The Ombal man became angry, demanded compensation, and assaulted the Handa pig owner when he refused. Relatives of both parties then joined in the dispute, and soon the entire membership of both clans—between four and six thousand people—was dragged into a war that had now raged for longer than Daniel could remember. He told me that, in the four years of fighting leading up to Soll’s death, seventeen other men had been killed.
Link

Originally posted by David Pescovitz from Boing Boing, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 25, 2008 at 02:57 AM
April 24, 2008
EcoCab Offers Toronto Green Short-Distance Transportation
EcoCab in Toronto photo EcoCabs has just arrived in Toronto, Canada. The 3-wheel vehicles are powered mostly by the driver's legs, but there's also an electric-motor assist to help them reach a cruising speed of up to 12 kph (7.5 mph) in city streets. Perfect for short distance trips, especially if you are a tourist (free rides will be offered during summer street festivals and special events), EcoCab claims to exceed the road safety standards that apply to it. "They will ride in the right-most lane and in bike lanes, where the average speed of traffic is 6 km per hour," says Will Kozma, president of GO Mobile Media, the company that sells advertising on the ad-supported cabs....

Originally from TreeHugger, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 24, 2008 at 03:07 PM
Think Opposite: Foot Pedal Water Faucet Controls

foot pedal water faucet controlers
This makes so much sense, I don’t know why more people aren’t using these. Usually found in hospitals or industrial kitchens, foot pedal water facets are not only more hygienic, but also have the potential to reduce wasted water use by 50%.

At a sink, you control the flow of a faucet with a pedal much like the accelerator in a car. It’s easier to turn off the faucet when you are brushing your teeth, shaving, or doing the dishes. In a four-person household, the use of pedal controllers in the kitchen alone can save up to 7500 gallons of water annually, as well as conserve the energy needed to heat those gallons.

[via Metaefficient]

Originally posted by Dan Gould from PSFK, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 24, 2008 at 02:53 PM
DARPA turns Arthur C. Clarke's Stiletto into MAHEM

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Arthur C. Clarke's ideas have had a tendency of becoming a reality in the past, and it looks like that's now happening yet again, in this case with a little help from the folks at DARPA. As New Scientist reports, the prolific agency is currently working on a new weapon system that bears a striking resembles to the Stiletto weapon in Clarke's 1955 novel Earthlight. That science fiction version was described as "a solid bar of light" that can pierce a spacecraft "as an entomologist pierces a butterfly with a pin." Or, more specifically, "a jet of molten metal, hurled through space at several hundred kilometers per second by the most powerful electro-magnets ever built." DARPA's MAHEM weapon (or Magneto Hydrodynamic Explosive Munition), on the other hand, is described by New Scientist as using magnetic fields to "propel either a narrow jet of molten metal or a chunk of molten metal that morphs into an aerodynamic slug during flight." There is a slight difference, however, in that MAHEM's electromagnetic field will be generated by an explosion, and not a giant electro-magnet. It's also not clear if MAHEM will be used to defend a fortress on the moon, although that's not exactly as far fetched as it once seemed either.
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Originally posted by Donald Melanson from Engadget, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 24, 2008 at 02:44 PM
Humans almost became two species
Ancient humans split into separate groups for 100,000 years before coming together again, a study suggests.
April 23, 2008
Culture Jamming With Ron English: “It’s Great To Be A Criminal”

Ron English Billboard Culture Jammer
Gelf Magazine has a great interview with notorious billboard artist and culture jammer Ron English. English creates subversive re-stylings of billboards to make viewers question the truth behind such obtrusive advertising (urban spam). He is also an accomplished painter, re appropriating elements of pop culture and classical art to create whole new narratives.

From the interview:

It’s great to be a criminal, right? You’re in pretty good company. It’s hard to explain to your kids, because they think that if you break the law you go to jail and you’re a criminal. But if you take out a history book, a lot of the people on the forefronts of social movements were considered criminals. We’re just ahead of the curve. Maybe the bad guy is the one who owns and puts up all the billboards all over the neighborhood, selling people malt liquor and cigarettes.

English, along with Alan Abel and Steve Lambert will be speaking at the latest Non Motivational Speaker Series. The event starts at 8pm, Thursday April 24th at The Happy Ending Lounge (302 Broome Street).

Gelf Magazine “The Anti-Warhol”

Originally posted by Dan Gould from PSFK, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 23, 2008 at 02:15 PM
Against Ben Stein's wishes, lizards rapidly evolve after introduction to Island
Marilyn Terrell says: "Lizards evolve 'overnight' on Croatian island.
evolve-lizard.jpg Italian wall lizards introduced to a tiny island off the coast of Croatia are evolving in ways that would normally take millions of years to play out, new research shows.

In just a few decades the 5-inch-long (13-centimeter-long) lizards have developed a completely new gut structure, larger heads, and a harder bite, researchers say.

Link

Originally posted by Mark Frauenfelder from Boing Boing, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 23, 2008 at 02:07 PM
Project H: Fund a Lifestraw for Mumbai for $25

Lifestraw Family, Vestergaard Frandsen, Project H Design, water filters, water filtration, water issues Mumbai

Building off the success of the Lifestraw Personal water filtration device, Vestergaard Frandsen’s new Lifestraw Family system provides 15,000 liters of clean drinking water to one household. And now, you can fund the delivery of one Lifestraw Family system to a slum community in Mumbai for $25 through Project H Design, an organization founded by Emily Pilloton that promotes and delivers life improving product designs to global communities. Project H will deliver 100 systems this summer as the first step in a bigger examination of local water sanitation issues. With more than a billion people lacking access to safe drinking water and five million people dying of water-related disease every year, here’s an opportunity to make a small but very real difference.

Donate via Paypal at Project H here.

(more…)

Originally posted by Emily Pilloton from INHABITAT, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 23, 2008 at 02:07 PM
April 22, 2008
The Symbiosis between Design & Information Visualization

231.jpg“Abstract: This paper analyzes the relationships between creative design and the field of information visualization, with a focus on historical connotations and newest developments that show great potential. Empirical evidence shows how designers often employ information visualization as a creative concept capable of significantly determining the design outcome, and vice versa, how information visualization can be enhanced by exploring interdisciplinary concepts, such as design cognition, user engagement, aesthetics and art. Several symbiotic dependencies are explained and demonstrated, including the first conceptual cyberspace and information architecture definitions. This paper will argue that information visualization should be enriched with the principles of creative design and art, to develop valuable data representations that address the emotional experience and engagement of users, instead of solely focusing on task effectiveness metrics. Finally, several interdisciplinary movements are described that show great symbiotic potential in the near future, especially in the fields of ambient information displays, informative art and location-based information awareness.” — The Symbiosis between Design & Information Visualization by Andrew Vande Moere, NeMe.org.

Originally posted by jo from Networked_Performance, ReBlogged by GOOD on Apr 22, 2008 at 10:01 PM