by Jason Weisberger on (#1TRDB)
The Grey Fox is a beautiful animal. Foxes also shit all over everything. They dared to touch my cars. What was I to do? A friend recommended coyote pee.First time I saw the foxes, I was sitting on a bench on my deck, playing guitar and having a good old time. Suddenly, out from under the deck beneath me, burst four grey foxes! I marveled at their rich and beautiful coats for a moment, and then screeched in fear and surprise! The foxes paused, stared at me, and then proceeded to head down the hill towards my driveway. Foxes do not like my cover of the Ventures' Walk Don't Run.After a few weeks I was really tired of finding fox crap every where. My Great Pyrenees, Nemo, was absolutely not tired of barking at and chasing foxes around all night long. Lack of sleep and muddy paw prints all over my convertible led me to try all sorts of humane deterrents. None worked. A friend kept telling me to try coyote urine, but for some reason I refused to listen. Finally exhaustion won out. Guess what, coyote pee worked!I took a sponge and cut it into 1" squares. I then soaked them with coyote pee and dropped them in strategic locations around the areas where I was having the most fox activity. I also poured small amounts in a few locations. Over night the foxes disappeared. Then they reappeared in my woodshed. So I treated the woodshed area. I'll keep at it until they go visit my neighbors, and my dog lets me sleep again. This urine comes from coyotes who are 100% meat fed! Coyotes here prefer mushrooms.Just Scentsational RS-16 Coyote Urine Small Pest Repellent, 16 oz via Amazon
|
Link | http://feeds.boingboing.net/ |
Feed | http://feeds.boingboing.net/boingboing/iBag |
Updated | 2024-11-26 01:16 |
by Cory Doctorow on (#1TRBW)
An anonymous woman has filed a class action suit against Standard Innovation, a company that makes We-Vibe "smart" sex toys that record exactly how their owners masturbate and transmit detailed dossiers, along with personally identifying information, back to the company. (more…)
|
by David Pescovitz on (#1TRBX)
In this video essay by Kristian Williams, the story of the biomechanical beasts from the mad mind of H.R. Giger, surrealist painter and designer best known for his work on the special effects team behind the film Alien (1979).
|
by Cory Doctorow on (#1TR9A)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-CdfIpTiE3gThe European Commission's "Copyright Modernisation" effort has wrapped up, and it's terrible. (more…)
|
by Cory Doctorow on (#1TQJR)
Someone -- possibly the government of China -- has launched a series of probing attacks on the internet's most critical infrastructure, using carefully titrated doses of denial-of-service to precisely calibrate a tool for shutting down the whole net. (more…)
|
by Rob Beschizza on (#1TQG4)
Adblock Plus, an adblocking plugin recently unveiled as a trojan horse for a new ad network, claimed Google and AppNexus were among its partners. This is not so, according to Google and AppNexus. (more…)
|
by Xeni Jardin on (#1TQAE)
A creepy series of shoops by IMGURian Kiyoi. (more…)
|
by Rob Beschizza on (#1TQ6W)
A 69-year-old woman was cold-cocked outside a Trump event by one of the Republican millionaire's supporters, reports ABC News—an attack so deplorable that cops plan to charge one of his violent rallygoers with a crime. (more…)
|
by Caroline Siede on (#1TQ27)
This is the best "Pixar-Off" I’ve ever seen.
|
by Caroline Siede on (#1TPZZ)
What happens when a socially anxious Edgar Allan Poe and his sarcastic ghost companion Lenore invite their favorite authors over for a murder mystery dinner party? Real murder, of course! At least that’s the premise of Shipwrecked Comedy’s new web series Edgar Allan Poe's Murder Mystery Dinner Party. (more…)
|
by Ruben Bolling on (#1TPYS)
FOLLOW @RubenBolling on the Twitters and a Face Book.JOIN Tom the Dancing Bug's subscription club, the Proud & Mighty INNER HIVE, for exclusive early access to comics, extra comics, and oh, so much more. GET Ruben Bolling’s new hit book series for kids, The EMU Club Adventures. (â€A book for the curious and adventurous!†-Cory Doctorow) Book One here. Book Two here. More Tom the Dancing Bug comics on Boing Boing! (more…)
|
by Andrea James on (#1TPW8)
Wallpaper took on the daunting task of narrowing down 20 years of design innovations to just over 100 eclectic choices, including the Tesla Roadster, the 9/11 memorial, Instagram, the bushy brow, and Ilse Crawford's IKEA collection, above. (more…)
|
by Caroline Siede on (#1TPWE)
When asked to draw pictures of firefighters, surgeons, and fighter pilots, a group of British grade school children produced 61 pictures of men and only five pictures of women. But a visit from three female professionals helps shift their point of view. (more…)
|
by Caroline Siede on (#1TPQZ)
Published on Medium, Jennifer Coates’ “I Am A Transwoman. I Am In The Closet. I Am Not Coming Out.†is a thoughtful, empathetic, challenging personal essay about identity. (more…)
|
by Andrea James on (#1TPN0)
Barnaby Roper filmed this otherworldly video of Gwendoline Christie (Brienne from Game of Thrones, Captain Phasma from Star Wars: The Force Awakens). Dutch fashion designer Iris van Herpen supplied the clothes, and Roper ran with the themes in the designs. (more…)
|
by Caroline Siede on (#1TPN2)
In this poignant video, Cate Blanchett, Keira Knightley, Juliet Stevenson, Peter Capaldi, Stanley Tucci, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Kit Harington, Douglas Booth, Jesse Eisenberg, and Neil Gaiman lend their voices to uplifting the current refugee crisis. They do so by performing a reading of Jenifer Toksvig’s rhythmic poem “What They Took With Them,†which was inspired by “stories and first-hand testimonies from refugees.†The video was released by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees as a way to draw attention to its #WithRefugees petition.
|
by Caroline Siede on (#1TPK7)
The Scottish sketch comedy series Limmy’s Show! explores that classic riddle in the best way possible. As someone wrote on Tumblr, “This is me during every moment of math class.â€
|
by Caroline Siede on (#1TPGN)
In this three-minute video, MTV News senior national correspondent Jamil Smith explores the ways toxic masculinity perpetuates rape culture. (more…)
|
by Andrea James on (#1TPGQ)
https://vimeo.com/163042303Peter Clark collaborated on this cool cymatics video for Thump, but the even cooler stuff is the camera test and the behind the scenes footage: (more…)
|
by Caroline Siede on (#1TPDW)
Not all people of color deal with the same issues around discrimination and prejudice. This BuzzFeed video explores experiences that people of color with darker skin tones have, and how colorism has shaped their lives.
|
by Xeni Jardin on (#1TP84)
A group of Russian scientists have been trapped for two weeks by polar bears at an Arctic island weather station. The scientists face a month-long wait for a rescue. (more…)
|
by Mark Frauenfelder on (#1TMEV)
This inexpensive remote control electrical outlet switch was just the thing we needed to completely turn off our electric garage door (we have reasons). It's pretty bulky, and gets in the way of the second socket on a standard wall outlet, but it gets the job done. It's RF not IR, so it doesn't need line-of-sight to work. It's $10 on Amazon.
|
by Jason Weisberger on (#1TMEX)
Instead of kegging, I wanted to set up a batch of beer that I could more easily share with friends. I decided to bottle a barleywine with these O2 absorbing bottlecaps.The idea is these caps will draw what little oxygen is in your bottle out. This should help preserve the beer by keep things from using that o2 to grow bad flavors. Can't be a bad idea, and at $6.42 for 144 I do not like I'm just wasting money.Cellaring a barleywine should help mellow its boozy flavor. The high alcohol content of a barleywine should make visiting with friends better for everyone.The caps went on easily. I used this simple capper.1 X Beer Bottle Caps - Oxygen Absorbing for Homebrew 144 count via Amazon
|
by David Pescovitz on (#1TMEZ)
Austin band Survive's masterful synth soundtrack to Stranger Things is available now digitally and at your local independent music shop on vinyl! Meanwhile, the surviving members of Tangerine Dream, a primary influence on Survivor's Kyle Dixon and Michael Stein, released their own covers of the Stranger Things score! Listen to them below. And here's a bit from an excellent interview that Billboard's Gil Kaufman conducted with Dixon and Stein:How did that main theme come to life? It's an old demo Michael had, but it's nothing like what you hear... nowhere near as much of a piece of music as it is now. That was just some random thing that ended up in the library they had and when they found it they were like, 'what if this was the main title?' We thought it could be good, so we built it out. We've been wanting to get into music for TV and film for a long time, but we had no idea how. We've been passively creating libraries, weird droney noises... so we had this collection of songs that we were trying to figure out how present to people in film....Without that previous (soundtrack) experience, how were you able to create music that spoke so deeply to the characters in the show? They said our music was actually used to help cast the show. During the demo period they said, 'we know you can do dark and epic, but this is a show about a group of kids, so we need to show the producers that you can do the more lighthearted, sentimental stuff.' So a lot of the demos were like that. They made the decision to play our music over the auditions and that was the deciding factor in casting.Tangerine Dream plays Stranger Things:
|
by Jason Weisberger on (#1TM9R)
Orange cheeses have been on my mind. I absolutely love aged gouda!Three plus year aged gouda completely loses the rubbery, bland, 'this is congealed milk' texture and taste of young goudas. It is crumbly, and delicious with hints of butterscotch, and lined with incredible sugar crystals. For the best aged gouda experience slice off the thinnest possible pieces with a cheese plane, and let them melt on your tongue.Aged gouda is amazing with beer and hard salami. A good dubbel would be my choice.The Reluctant Gourmet has all the details:Most of us have enjoyed some form of Gouda cheese in our lives. It is a yellow cheese made from cow’s milk and is often found with the red or yellow paraffin wax coating in the supermarket. It gets its name from the city of Gouda in the Netherlands where it originated.Gouda as a young cheese is easy to slice and may be great to serve to the kids in their lunch packs but just doesn’t have that much flavor. It’s great if you enjoy a mild, mellow flavored cheese but if you want a much more distinct flavor, you’ll want to try aged Gouda.Aged Gouda has a wonderful distinctive flavor that can be both sharp and sweet – think of butterscotch. It is a hard cheese that doesn’t come in the red wax covering, but a natural buff colored rind. The cheese itself has an amber color that Jack explained to me comes from a coloring agent called annatto that gives it the pale orange color.I read in one of my favorite cheese books, Cheese Primer, that some cheeses “once had a natural orange hue caused by the vitamin D that cows ingested from grazing on green plants. But winter milk comes from cows that are fed silage, and the cheeses that result from this milk are white.â€So the cheese makers started adding food coloring like annatto to the milk so they would look the same year round. Jack explained to me “all cheese are naturally cream colored and many use coloring for eye appeal.â€
|
by David Pescovitz on (#1TM65)
In Wired, our pal Adam Savage geeks out with Tom Sachs, a sculptor who makes incredibly intricate space-themed installations:(Sachs had) mounted two Space Program exhibitions—the moon (at Gagosian Gallery in Beverly Hills) in 2007 and then Mars (at the Park Avenue Armory in New York) in 2012. There were the blue Tiffany Glock and orange Hermès hand grenade, and also a Chanel chain saw and a Prada toilet. And a foam-core R2-D2, which I’d collected pictures of as inspiration for building my own DIY Artoo, a decade before I knew who Sachs was.We had a lot in common. We’re both obsessive organizers. We both make replicas. And when we’re in the shop and can’t think of what to work on, we build infrastructure—stands, shelves, benches. Sachs told me he’d cribbed construction ideas from MythBusters Now he uses my workshop when he’s on the West Coast, and I use his when I’m back east. Our wives describe our relationship status as “dating.â€When I look at Sachs’ workshop, what’s more familiar to me than the tools are the rituals, the signs of how Sachs turns prosaic objects and materials into art."Ground Control to Major Tom" by Adam Savage (Wired)
|
by Cory Doctorow on (#1TM67)
Lotus Dimension is a tabletop, D&D-style role-playing game in which characters advance through nonviolent means -- a game that incorporates "amazing sci-fi and fantasy storytelling while also incorporating principles of nonviolence inspired by peaceful protests, historical leaders and the tenets of peaceful philosophical practices." (more…)
|
by David Pescovitz on (#1TM2F)
Movie trailer for The Cat from Outer Space (1978), directed by Norman Tokar and starring Ken Berry, Sandy Duncan, Harry Morgan, and Roddy McDowall. I predict a remake in 3... 2... 1....If you're, er, curious, you can watch it on Amazon Video: The Cat from Outer Space
|
by Cory Doctorow on (#1TKQK)
The nonprofit Urban Institute's new study, Impossible Choices: Teens and Food Insecurity in America used paired, single-gender focus groups in 10 urban communities to learn about the hunger and food strategies of children aged 10 to 17 whose families received food assistance (the total sample size was 193). (more…)
|
by Boing Boing's Store on (#1TKQN)
If you’re an active person, then you need headphones that can keep up with you—and these waterproof FRESHeBUDS can definitely hang.Packing an enhanced battery life and a sound quality that’s unrivaled for their compact size, these earbuds will play your favorite tunes for up to 10 hours on a single 90 minute charge. Just connect them to your phone via Bluetooth by pulling them apart—it’s automatic. When you’re done listening, place the earbuds back together, and the connection will turn off.Plus, the FRESHeBUDS are designed to be lightweight and stay in your ears no matter what you’re doing: running, jumping, or swimming. You can even answer calls straight from the earbuds with a built-in microphone.If you’re ready to upgrade your headphones, now’s the time: the FRESHeBUDS are 66% off retail, at just $39.95 in the Boing Boing store.
|
by Cory Doctorow on (#1TKKZ)
Kratom is a herb that has been in widespread use in Southeast Asia for centuries; it is chewed for to increase stamina, induce gentle euphoria and relaxation, and it has also been used with unheard-of success to help people kick their addictions to opioid painkillers. (more…)
|
by Rob Beschizza on (#1TKJT)
"The auctioneer is typically speaking logical sentences quickly," says Barry Baker of Ohio Real Estate Auctions, "with filler words mixed in." (more…)
|
by Cory Doctorow on (#1TKJW)
I discovered Villains and Vigilantes in 1982, with the publication of the game's second edition, and 11-year-old me played it like a fiend; I still remember long hours of designing costumes on the super-cool character sheets that came with the game (we'd sneak into the school office and run off more of these from blanks; ditto for hex-ruled paper for Car Wars and all the best stories from that month's Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine). (more…)
|
by Caroline Siede on (#1TK6W)
If you like puns you’ll love Keren Rosen’s work, which turns idioms into adorable chariactures. You can find Rosen's art on her Facebook page or as prints on her Etsy shop, Dings & Doodles. (more…)
|
by Andrea James on (#1TK70)
Animal-rights group SHARK thought they'd launch their drone on public property in July to get some footage of Harris Feeding Company, a massive and apparently pungent cattle feedlot near Coalinga, California. Each day, local cops got called out every time they tried to film. (more…)
|
by Andrea James on (#1TK72)
"The cost of excess bureaucracy in the U.S. economy amounts to more than $3 trillion in lost economic output, or about 17% of GDP," write Gary Hamel and Michele Zanini in Harvard Business Review. Their recommendation? Cut management in half. The don't specify if that's crosswise or lengthwise. (more…)
|
by Caroline Siede on (#1TK74)
There are two things that have gotten lost in the controversy over Hillary Clinton’s “basket of deplorables†speech: a.) It was mostly focused on reaffirming the importance of LGBT rights to her campaign and b.) It ended with Clinton introducing Barbra Streisand. (more…)
|
by Andrea James on (#1TK76)
Jeff Rowan loves Richard Linklater's Before Sunrise. When he decided to look into the young woman who inspired the trilogy of films, he discovered a remarkably moving story that's worth the 20 minutes if you love those films. (more…)
|
by Caroline Siede on (#1TK78)
Getting college advice from Seth Meyers is nice, but getting college advice from First Lady Michelle Obama is priceless (even if she does pressure you to eat your vegetables).
|
by Jason Weisberger on (#1TGPN)
Now that so many wonderful strains and variants of marijuana are available legally, it is a crying shame to smoke dope out of a dirty pipe. Formula 420 really works and it smells great. (more…)
|
by Xeni Jardin on (#1TGPQ)
She's a rescue kitty, and her human just showed her a red dot on the wall for the very first time. (more…)
|
by Cory Doctorow on (#1TGKN)
Writing on Medium, AI researcher Kate Crawford (previously) and Simply Secure (previously) co-founder Meredith Whittaker make the case for a new scholarly discipline that "measures and assesses the social and economic effects of current AI systems." (more…)
|
by Cory Doctorow on (#1TGEA)
Randall Munroe once again shows that he's one of the web's most talented storytellers, inventing ways of conveying information that use the web's affordances to novel and sharp effect (there's a reason he won a Hugo award). (more…)
|
by Boing Boing's Store on (#1TGEC)
It's no secret that tiny drones are super fun to fly because of their nimble movements, high speeds, and easy maneuverability. The downside is missing out on the cameras offered by larger drones on the market. That's exactly why the World’s Smallest Camera Drone is so amazing. Get all the benefits of a mini drone with the advantage of snapping awesome aerial shots along the way. At only $26.99, this tiny drone surprisingly packs a ton of really impressive features. It's omni-directional, meaning it can turn every which way you tell it to with the included remote control. And it doesn’t skimp on speed either: 3 speed flight modes let you control whether you want to cruise or tear through the sky.With its superior flying stability and side flight, hover, flip, and hand launch capabilities, the World’s Smallest Camera Drone is full of opportunities to advance your drone piloting skills. Plus, the attached LED lights let you fly the drone at night, so you can capture crystal-clear video and photography no matter what time of day it is. As a bonus, there’s even a 2GB camera memory card included so you can store your photos onboard. It's available now in the Boing Boing Store for 46% off the retail price - simply click here for more info.
|
by Cory Doctorow on (#1TG7E)
John Frost writes, "With the return of this year's Haunted Mansion Holiday, Disneyland has also returned recreations of the original tombstones the rides original Imagineers left as tributes to themselves. I'm very happy because one of the 13 'family plots' includes the long-missing tribute to my grandfather - Vic Greene." (more…)
|
by Cory Doctorow on (#1TG7G)
They're on sale at Trader Sam's at the Disneyland Hotel for $30, limit 2 per customer. (Excited about this, but Trader Sam's needed another reason for crazy, badly managed queues like it needed a hole in its draught beer pressure system). (Thanks, Cecil!)
|
by David Pescovitz on (#1TG7J)
In 1991, MTV, back when it was edgy and relevant, commissioned Rev. Ivan Stang of The Church of the SubGenius -- the religion, disguised as a joke (or is it a joke disguised as a religion?) -- to make a television spot as part of the network's fantastic Art Break series of short films. "Mark Mothersbaugh of DEVO did the music and the miniatures and masks were created by the late St. Joe Riley," Stang writes. Above is that video. Below is a documentary that Stang edited into a souvenir for the cast and crew. Praise Bob! (Thanks, UPSO!)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_cBHaSmH58s
|
by Cory Doctorow on (#1TG7M)
Dave Maass from Electronic Frontier Foundation writes, "A coalition of social justice and digital rights groups are tweeting at Gov. Jerry Brown today to demand he sign A.B. 2298, a bill that would bring new accountability measures to CalGang, the state's troubled gang database. (more…)
|
by Jason Weisberger on (#1TG58)
The fast paced action and twisted humor continue in Benjamin Wallace's Pursuit of the Apocalypse!With his girlfriend captured by bounty hunters Jerry the Librarian, and his amazing mastiff Chewey, are desperate to pull off a rescue! Complicating matters is the simple fact that nothing Jerry ever plans works out. Also, somehow tales of Jerry's heroism have turned him into a hero, and so an evil overlord wants him dead! All Jerry wants is to ride off into the sunset, in his RV, with his girlfriend Erica and his dog.This is one hell of an apocalypse.Pursuit of the Apocalypse (A Duck & Cover Adventure Post-Apocalyptic Series Book 3) via Amazon
|
by David Pescovitz on (#1TG5A)
Beginning in 1951, the United States exploded atomic bombs at the Nevada Test Site, 65 miles northwest of Las Vegas. Seen here are snapshots of the tests that, in many cases, illuminated the Los Angeles and Las Vegas skies with a nuclear dawn. More at Amusing Planet.
|