Author Archives: Marc

About Marc

Editor for Blog it Yourself and journalist in a variety of media.

DIY News Roundup: May 2013

The DIY News Roundup is a recurring column collecting reporting on DIY culture from around the globe. 

  • Makers will converge on the SF Bay Area on May 18th & 19th for the 2013 Maker Faire.  Highlights of the DIY festival include hacker races, workshops and presentations by Adam Savage and other makers.  There will be a special workshop on the 17th for those interested in creating a Makerspace.
  • Tales of the San Francisco Cacophony Society, chronicling the birth of such movements as flash mobs and Santacon, is published and now available.
  • The Atlantic posts a collection of Chinese DIY Inventions as evidence of “a rise in prominence of inventors and entrepreneurs” in the blossoming nation. The photos include homemade submarines, aircraft, robots, cannons, bicycle boats, prosthetics, and more.Chinese DIY Inventions
  • Oregon Senate Bill 578 is introduced, proposing to prohibit “harvesting of wild mushrooms without wild mushroom harvesting permit” in the fungi-rich state. A variety of affected groups, businesses and individuals expressed concern at the public hearing.
  • Grow: How to Take Your Do It Yourself Project and Passion to the Next Level and Quit Your Job! by Eleanor Whitney is crowdfunded through RocketHub and will be published by Microcosm Publishing in June.  The book is “a practical field guide for creative people with great ideas for independent projects that shows the way to success and sustainability on your own terms.”Grow Book
  • Learning is for Everyone and The Urban Conga in Tampa, Florida win the 2013 Deconstruction Award for building a “Tree of Technology where the machine parts were used as fruit of the tree satisfying a hunger for knowledge in the world of electronics.”

What DIY news are you discussing? Comment below.

New Edition of Mushroom “Bible” In The Works

At the recent Fungus Fair in Santa Cruz, celebrated author David Arora announced he is in the process of revising Mushrooms Dymystified, known to mycologists and other fungi enthusiasts as the definitive text for mushroom identification.

Presenting at the fair, Arora mentioned offhand his progress with the new edition.  He said his aim was to make the edition the most accessible yet.  Referencing the personal stories he shared of fellow foragers, he wants the language updated to reflect mushroom culture.  Mushroom edibility would no longer use archaic terms like “choice” but his own colorful vernacular.

Behold the Gamelatron

The Maker Faire festival is a mecca for inventions, arts and crafts in a kind-of re-imagined county fair.  Organized by the staff of the magazines Make and Craft, the Faire tries to inspire attendees to roll up their sleeves and become makers themselves.  I traveled to the recent Faire that took place in San Mateo, California.  There I found that nothing is too sacred that it can’t be tinkered with, hacked or modified by the many inventors there.

The Gamelatron at the Maker Faire

Take for example, the Gamelatron: the world’s first fully robotic gamelan orchestra.  In a radio piece produced for KUSP, I interview the invention’s creator, Taylor Kufner.

Brew it Yourself: Part 1

I used to hate beer.  Most Americans experience beer and alcoholic beverages as a rite of passage into adulthood, but I refused to follow the crowd.  Despite their fowl taste, most of us are introduced to beer through the cheapest, most processed versions available.  I remember someone once explaining to me a kind of golden rule to appreciating (bad) beer, in an attempt to get me started: after ten cans the foul taste will go away!  Even hardcore vegetarians and vegans can be found making exceptions for these beers, many of which contain animal products like bone, bladder, and dried blood. But I wanted nothing to do with them.

Then I moved to Portland, Oregon.

The wet city in the Pacific Northwest contains more brewpubs per-capita than anywhere else in the world, even Germany.  I was surrounded by exotic Scotch Ales and fruity Lamics.  It wasn’t long until I was trying beers left and right and attending such world-class beer events as the Oregon Brewers Festival and the Holiday Ale Festival.  So then with so many great beers out there, why did it take me so long to find them?

Last year’s documentary film, Beer Wars, answers my question with a sobering story.  Through an inside glimpse into the beer industry, the film illuminates how the giants of the market reinforce their dominance and squelch micro brewers using every tactic available.  Distribution companies and grocery stores are manipulated to ensure that the smaller companies have little to no room in the trucks or on the shelves.  We watch as the humble brewmaster of microbrewery Dogfish Head is served with litigation from Anheuser-Busch.  Even though the suit is bogus, it is obvious that the corporation is aiming to simply bankrupt the little guys in legal fees.  Why?  Because they can. Continue reading

Wikipedia Stands Up to FBI’s Take Down Notice

Is Wikipedia using this seal to impersonate the FBI?

As reported in the New York Times, the widely popular collaborative information website known as Wikipedia has been threatened with prosecution if it does not remove the FBI seal from the site’s pages.  The Wikimedia Foundation – the nonprofit charitable organization that runs Wikipedia – wrote back that the FBI’s was “incorrect” in interpreting its use as an effort to impersonate the agency:

Our inclusion of an image of the FBI Seal is in no way evidence of any “intent to deceive,” nor is it an “assertion of authority,” recognizable or otherwise.

Over the years, Wikipedia has enacted new standards for ensuring the legal validity of the content on its site.  Users must now provide detailed information on how uploaded images meet permission and licensing standards for approval.  Ironically, the credits for the FBI image file on Wikipedia include a warning to users about the same law now being used against the website:

Author Federal Bureau of Investigation
Permission
Public domain from a copyright standpoint, but other restrictions apply. In the US, unauthorized use of the FBI seal, name, and initials are subject to prosecution under Federal Criminal law, including 18 U.S.C § 701, § 709, and § 712.

Wikimedia’s author of the response, their general counsel Michael Godwin, took it a step further in his letter and called out the FBI for selectively removing statute language in their notice.  He begins by asking, “May we talk a little bit further about ejusdem generis and your creative editing of the statute?” before ripping into the agency’s gross interpretation in a humorously cordial fashion.

Read the full letter as a .pdf courtesy of the New York Times.

DIY in 2009

Its a bit late, but in preparation for the 1st issue of my new zine, DIY 2010, I’ve been compiling a list of notable events from 2009.  Is there something important to DIY culture that you don’t see here?  Let me know!

January

  • New device uses laser beams to project your own lane from the back of your bicycle,
  • Shooting of Oscar Grant in Oakland, California, sparks months of protests and clashes with police,
  • Canada is no longer a safe place for U.S. war resisters
  • Faythe Levine releases her documentary “Handmade Nation” alongside her book “Craft’s New Wave”,
  • FCC Free Radio begins broadcasting
  • Make Magazine begins airing a new national TV series
  • Bolivia approves of a new constitution that creates a ministry in support of indigenous autonomy

Continue reading