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by Andrea James on (#3WDRD)
Three adults dug out their childhood Yu-Gi-Oh! card collection for an expert appraisal, and all were surprised, albeit one unpleasantly so. (more…)
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Boing Boing
| Link | https://boingboing.net/ |
| Feed | https://boingboing.net/feed |
| Updated | 2026-06-24 06:05 |
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by Rusty Blazenhoff on (#3WDMD)
OMG, what did I just watch?!Rolling Stone:
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by Eric Mittleman on (#3WDKG)
Dogs are great. They just are. They're a source of happiness, joy and unconditional love. I know mine is (pic above). However, they have a mind of their own which sometimes can be frustrating and other times a true danger. The good news is that with a little patience and knowledge you can hack your dog's brain. (more…)
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by Andrea James on (#3WDKJ)
A gray area exists between stars and planets, and what was thought to be a failed brown dwarf star has now been determined to be a massive rogue planet with an enormous gravity field. (more…)
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by Andrea James on (#3WDKM)
Bioengineering future Martian colonists may be easier than taking the many difficult steps to reduce radiation exposure. But is it ethical? (more…)
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by Rusty Blazenhoff on (#3WDGB)
The Hollywood studio that crushed Lance Bass' dream of buying the Brady Bunch house has been revealed. It's HGTV. But the amount they paid has not yet been disclosed.
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by Rob Beschizza on (#3WDGD)
The AP: Man who jumped out of freezer and died was cold-case suspect.
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by Andrea James on (#3WDGF)
Hobbyist gold miners are a joy to behold. Their enthusiasm in panning for gold and running sand through sluices is clearly a labor of love. Watch as they put all their gear through its paces, with their delight and fascination never waning. (more…)
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by Andrea James on (#3WDFF)
Skipping stones takes a little practice and finesse, so Mark Rober enlisted his extended family to help build the perfect rock-skipping robot. Their creation, named Skippa, ended up helping humans learn, too. (more…)
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by Andrea James on (#3WDFK)
"When you tap the tape, it sounds like a electro-magnetic drum." The open Open Reel Ensemble created this cool instrument by stringing several tapes and engaging in tape tapping. (more…)
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#3WD9T)
Maniac, a 10-part miniseries on Netflix, debuts September 21. It stars Emma Stone, Owen Milgrim, Justin Theroux, and Sally Field. It's Cary Fukunaga, who also directed the ultra-creepy first season of True Detective.From Netflix:
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#3WD9V)
A kindly sheriff's deputy in Clare County, Michigan kept her community safe by locking up an 80-year-old woman who had a small amount of marijuana and an expired medical cannabis note. The senior uses weed to relieve her arthritis, diverticulitis, muscle, and bone pain.From Marijuana Moment:
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by Gina Loukareas on (#3WCPE)
It’s nearly impossible to go anywhere these days without tripping over a Funko Pop. The vinyl toys have taken the pop culture world by storm, with characters ranging from Star Wars and Game of Thrones to Rick and Morty and RuPaul’s Drag Race. They’ve been referred to as “Precious Moments for Generation X,†and there could be some truth to that. Like Jason’s purchase of a single Mr. Rogers Pop, I once purchased a single Pop of Jax Teller from Sons of Anarchy, with the intention of never buying any others. 300+ Pops later...With all the madness surrounding Funko, Precious Moments decided it didn’t want to be left out of the nostalgia game. You remember what the figurines look like, right? Those sugary cute pastel colored ceramic figurines of little kids and old couples? Well, these figurines are coming straight out of Saturday detention. Cue Simple Minds. My first reaction when I saw this was to feel very old. After all, The Breakfast Club is one of the defining movies of my adolescence, which doesn't feel that freaking long ago. The second was to see if I had any extra shelf space. Precious Moments also offers a set of Princess Bride characters and one of Marty McFly from Back to the Future. A Golden Girls set is rumored to be in the design stages. And speaking of the Golden Girls, the merchandise license to the 80’s NBC comedy is red hot right now. Just over the past few months, we’ve seen Golden Girls Monopoly, Clue, Trivial Pursuit, Funko Pops and Dorbz, t-shirts and even hot sauce. 
And then there’s this, arriving on shelves just in time for the holidays. Is it just me or does Dorothy look like Phil Spector?[Images: Bradford Exchange/Geekologie]
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#3WCJR)
Heritage Auctions announced the sale of Frank Frazetta’s Escape on Venus for $660,000.
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by David Pescovitz on (#3WCCD)
With L.A.'s iconic Eddie Blake's Tail o' the Pup hot dog stand set to reopen, LAist posted a brief photographic history of the city's fantastic history of "'programmatic architecture,' buildings designed to look like food, animals or other items.""LA's Awesome History Of Weird, Food-Shaped Restaurants" (via NextDraft)images: Los Angeles Public Library Collection
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by David Pescovitz on (#3WC4Z)
In 1960, Sister Rosetta Tharpe performed this rousing rendition of "This Little Light of Mine" at France's Festival de Jazz d’Antibes Juan-les-Pins. Most of us are familiar with "This Little Light of Mine" as a lovely children's spiritual, but the 1920s tune, written by Harry Dixon Loes, became an anthem of the Civil Rights movement.Learn more about the song's history at NPR: "'This Little Light Of Mine' Shines On, A Timeless Tool Of Resistance"(via The Kid Should See This)
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by Jason Weisberger on (#3WC51)
This $75 air fryer is getting an awful lot of use in my kitchen. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#3WC0F)
There's been a lot of news freakout over Defense Distributed (previously) and "3D printed guns" (a term that confusingly encompasses milled guns, 3D printed guns, and files that describe the shapes of guns). (more…)
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by Andrea James on (#3WC0G)
New research suggests that a key cause of poverty is poor parents' lack of engagement with neonates and toddlers. Brazil is trying to change that by showing parents the importance of interacting meaningfully with young children through eye contact and activities. (more…)
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by David Pescovitz on (#3WC0J)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8oKym79Q2pwResearchers have harnessed popcorn to drive simple robotic actuators. Cornell University engineers Steve Ceron, Kirstin H. Petersen, and colleagues demonstrated mechanical devices that exert force or change shape when their internal kernels pop. From Cornell:
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by Jason Weisberger on (#3WC0M)
Know who loves Trump? Folks in Russia who make asbestos.Nearly a thing of the past, asbestos causes lung cancer, asbestosis and mesothelioma. The Trump Administration is eager to bring asbestos back, because sanity had almost eliminated it. New EPA regulations are opening up opportunities for Russians to sell asbestos in the US.Via EWG.org:
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by Andrea James on (#3WBX1)
Donald Trump's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame has become a honeypot for vandals, MAGA-hat cretins, and all sorts of shenanigans, so the West Hollywood City Council unanimously voted to remove it permanently. (more…)
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by David Pescovitz on (#3WBX3)
HTGV (Home & Garden Television) bought the iconic Brady Bunch house at 11222 Dilling St. in North Hollywood, California. This is the home that was used for exterior shots on the TV show. (The interior was built in a Hollywood studio.) From CNN:
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by Andrea James on (#3WBX5)
As part of its efforts to source its materials more responsibly, LEGO is launching a line of plant forms made from sustainable sugarcane plastics instead of petroleum-based plastic. (more…)
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by Jason Weisberger on (#3WBX7)
Apparently a stick shift is the best theft deterrent. They would have gotten away with it too, if it wasn't for being bumbling kids!Via KLTV:
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by Cory Doctorow on (#3WBRX)
I'm on the latest episode of Torrentfreak's Steal This Show podcast (MP3), where I talk with host Jamie King about "Whether file-sharing & P2P communities have lost the battle to streaming services like Netflix and Spotify, and why the ‘copyfight’ is still important; how the European Copyright Directive eats at the fabric of the Web, making it even harder to compete with content giants; and why breaking up companies like Google and Facebook might be the only way to restore an internet — and a society — we can all live with."
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by Cory Doctorow on (#3WBRZ)
The City of New York has declared that all from its city jails will henceforth be free; meaning the city will forego the $5,000,000 it took from prisoners and their families every year. (more…)
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by Andrea James on (#3WBS1)
Mitochindrial replacement techniques, which produce "three-parent babies," promise to allow infertile couples to have babies, and even allow people with debilitating genetic disorders to have healthy babies. The largely unregulated tech is already producing babies despite the unknown long-term risks. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#3WBS3)
Pablo Defendini (previously) writes, "Fireside Magazine’s editor, Julia Rios, is part of The Mexicanx Initiative, a scholarship fund John Picacio put together for sending Mexicanx and Mexican-American sf/f authors to Worldcon. A few of the Mexicanx Initiative authors decided to create an anthology to commemorate the occasion, and had been planning on subsidizing the cost of printing and shipping themselves. When Fireside got word of this last week, we decided to pitch in, and we put together a Kickstarter campaign to raise the $1500 they needed."Well, we blew past our funding goal, and we decided that any money left over would be split evenly among all the participants (Fireside isn't making a cent off this). So now we're trying to reach a stretch goal of $7500 by the end of the campaign this Friday, so that we can not only cover their production costs, but pay every author, artist, designer, translator, and editor who donated their work a SFWA-qualifying pro rate."Mexicanx Initiative Anthology [Fireside/Kickstarter]
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by Cory Doctorow on (#3WBS5)
When Josh Black quit his job as Obama's director for U.N. and Multilateral Affairs after the 2016 election (citing "growing disillusionment"), he found a sweet job as Associate Vice President for International Advocacy at Phrma, the global lobbying group for the pharmaceutical industry, which meant that he still got to work at the UN, but now he'd be advocating for giant, rapacious corporations that hold peoples' lives hostage to their profits! (speaking as a former NGO observer at the World Intellectual Property Organization from the era of the Access to Medicines treaty, Phrma are effectively public health war criminals). (more…)
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by Rusty Blazenhoff on (#3WBS7)
UK artist Lucy Sparrow is back with a new shopping opportunity for lovers of her fantastic felt products. Until August 31, at The Standard hotel in downtown Los Angeles, Sparrow is showing her most ambitious exhibit yet: the Sparrow Mart Supermarket. This is her fifth and largest all-felt installation (it features 31,000 handmade products) and her first West Coast one. She writes, "As a child, I was obsessed with the exotic, turbo-charged technicolour glow emanating from across the Atlantic. The source of this neon rainbow was Los Angeles – a seemingly mythical place to a child growing up in grey, post-recession Britain – and one that has hugely influenced my artistic practice. Thanks to the amazing team at The Standard, Downtown, the felt is finally coming home to the city of endless possibilities and colour.â€The store is quite spectacular. There's aisles of handmade awesomeness, including a felt ATM, as you can see here:According to Sparrow (in this video), it took her and five assistants exactly one year to create all the items in the shop.https://youtu.be/EB3qR5WGjVUSpecial thanks to my friend Michael Fleming for the heads up on this! I hope I can get myself down to LA before the end of the month to check it out for myself. For those of you who don't know, I'm a Fluff superfan (long story). So, when Michael texted me from the store to see if I wanted one of Sparrow's felt Fluff jars, I was ecstatic. He delivered it today and it already as a special spot in the Fluff section of my trophy case.One funny thing: I was surprised to hear Sparrow chose Los Angeles to include Fluff, as it's an East Coast product and has been difficult to source on the West Coast for many years (pro-tip: Cost Plus usually has it). I'm not complaining though.photos by Michael Fleming, The Standard, Downtown LA, and Rusty Blazenhoff
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by Cory Doctorow on (#3WBS9)
https://youtu.be/vFHzrmk5Md0Qanon is a person or group behind an unhinged right-wing conspiracy theory that is really too stupid to elucidate (you can listen to this Reply All if you're really interested); it's a kind of trumpian Pizzagate successor that includes great, unhealthy lashings of secret Democratic pedophile rings (because far-right assholes are more worried about imaginary children in nonexistent pizzeria basements than they are actual children in ICE cages). (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#3WBM8)
When the FCC announced its intention to kill Network Neutrality, it had to accept public comments, and what followed was bizarre even by Trump-era standards: first, millions of living, breathing Americans sent so many pro-Net Neutrality comments to the FCC that the website crashed; then bots spammed the FCC with millions of obviously fake anti-Neutrality comments, stealing the identities of real Americans (including two US Senators!) to do so; despite the overwhelming evidence that humans loved Net Neutrality and bots hated it, the FCC declared that it would give the bot comments equal weight with the human ones; and then it stopped accepting comments, claiming that its website had been hacked. (more…)
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by Andrea James on (#3WBMA)
What used to take an artisan months can now be done with laser precision in minutes. Watch as this high speed laser array engraves an intricate pattern. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#3WBMC)
The UK Committees of Advertising Practice changed the rules for ISP advertising: where once the ISPs could advertise speeds of "Up to" some incredibly high number so long as 10% of customers ever achieved that speed, now ISPs can only advertise a speed promise if 51% of their customers attain that speed at all times. (more…)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#3WBFM)
Trump's economic statistics are all about stock growth and low unemployment numbers, but more than two thirds of the US economy is driven by consumer spending, so if you want to know where we're headed, you should be looking at the average American's ability to buy things. (more…)
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by Boing Boing's Shop on (#3WBEV)
Emails tend to fall through the cracks, especially when you're managing multiple accounts. Sometimes it's just spam, and other times it's a job offer or important reply that disappears down the inbox wormhole. For those of us looking to minimize vanishing emails, Mailbird Pro lets you manage all of your emails and contacts from multiple accounts easily in one unified inbox. Lifetime plans are available in the Boing Boing Store for $14.99.With Mailbird Pro, you don't have to hop back and forth between different email accounts, apps, or windows online. MailBird bakes them all into one streamlined application and lets you work through you emails even faster with intuitive shortcuts for archiving and forwarding, and it even boasts an integrated speed reader. What's more, MailBird can also integrate with built-in apps like Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Dropbox for added versatility.Lifetime plans for MailBird Pro are available in the Boing Boing Store for $14.99.
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by Rusty Blazenhoff on (#3WBEX)
From light to dark, affordable high-heeled shoes are available in a variety of skin tones from British retail brand Marks and Spencer (M&S). French shoe designer Christian Louboutin first brought "nude" shoes, in seven shades, to the market in 2017, but the collection was very pricey. https://www.instagram.com/p/BV5BJGkBCaE/Now, M&S is offering six "vegan friendly" (which is code for "not leather") shades of stilettos for approximately $33/pair.Not everyone is impressed, however:(TAXI)
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by Cory Doctorow on (#3WBEZ)
The rich world has never been more unequal, and the poor world has never richer: in 2018, we're seeing record low levels of global "extreme poverty" (a measure that's admittedly a bit fuzzy) and record levels of inequality, which wealth concentrated into a declining number of hands. (more…)
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by Andrea James on (#3WBF1)
Boaters in Comox, British Columbia were surprised to find an orca that had been acting strangely in the harbor began pulling a boat around like it was a toy. (more…)
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by Seamus Bellamy on (#3WBB0)
For years, I maintained a Skype number that’d forward to whatever phone number I happened to be using at the time. It was the only way to make myself reachable on the phone, despite my switching to a new mobile number every time I moved to a different region. It worked well enough—until last year when Microsoft redesigned the iOS version of their app to make it damn near unusable as a phone forwarding service. I hated Skype’s mobile makeover so much that I decided not to renew my annual plan with the service. If you want to find me, these days, it has to happen via Twitter or email. It seems that users of Microsoft’s desktop version of the app have all sorts of loathing for its recent redesign as well. According to The Verge, the backlash against version 8.0 of the app has been so widespread that it’s put Microsoft back on its heels. From The Verge:
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by Seamus Bellamy on (#3WBB2)
We’ve known for a while that military personnel using GPS-enabled health tracking apps and accessories in sensitive operational areas was kind of a problem, from an intelligence standpoint. Such appliances make it wicked easy for someone to check in on the wearer’s daily routine, whereabouts or, should enough people in an operational area use the same service like Strava, figure out where personnel congregate at certain times of the day, no satellite surveillance or human intelligence assets required. Well, it looks like the Department of Defense has finally decided to do something about it: As of right now, DoD employees are no longer allowed to wear or use a wide variety of health tracking hardware. From Gizmodo:
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by Rusty Blazenhoff on (#3WB89)
In Boots Riley's Sorry to Bother You, there's a protest scene where there's a 12-foot-tall "Steve Lift Fucking a Horse" sculpture. It's hard to miss! Well, come to find out, my badass friend Spy Emerson (whose Hook Up Truck made international news a few years back) is the artist who created it. And now I've learned, on Boots' request, she's made a mini version of the sculpture to sell.If you want to get on your hands it, you can find her on Instagram or Patreon. Or you can reach her through her website. https://www.instagram.com/p/BlRVRdCBMr6/?taken-by=spy.emersonSpy shared with me that she clocked in 130 hours during filming last summer, as both an artist and a performer, and appears in the movie as a member of the Left Eye girl gang (in the photo below, she's the one in the goggles). In one scene she said that she's wearing an old punk t-shirt of hers from high school that reads, "Stay Warm, Burn the Rich."https://twitter.com/BootsRiley/status/1025490819153686528
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by Cory Doctorow on (#3WB7J)
(more…)
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by Andrea James on (#3WB7M)
Yosuke Kurosawa takes a tour of Nara Juvenile Prison, which was in use until 2017 and will soon be turned into hotels for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. It's like a really clean Shawshank Prison. (more…)
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by Rob Beschizza on (#3WAJB)
The tweet has been removed and apologies made concerning this threatening message, depicting a Canadian airliner aimed at the CN Tower in Toronto, a response to Canadian criticism of Saudi Arabia's spectacularly grim human rights record.
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by Rob Beschizza on (#3WA7A)
Todd Kincannon was found "bloodied and covered in dog hair" by police officers after killing and mutilating his mother's 10-year-old beagle.
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by Rob Beschizza on (#3WA3Z)
Another delight from Retro Pi Cases, albeit one you won't yet be stuffing a computer in. [Previously]
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by Xeni Jardin on (#3WA41)
Rick Gates, on the witness stand today in the trial of Paul Manafort, says he committed crimes with Manafort, and embezzled “hundreds of thousands†of dollars from Manafort. (more…)
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by Jason Weisberger on (#3W9XC)
This handy wallwart lets me charge my phone and watch while I sleep, without a lot of extra chargers hanging around.After living in the same house for 10 years I am pretty sure I know where I want things. Moving USB chargers around gets tiresome, and the sheer convenience of just having a few USB ports on the wall behind my bed became too much to resist.I have also never had electronics damaged by a "surge." I am glad that so many of my home electronics are protected, as The Protectors have clearly done their job. HERE IS TO YOU SURGE PROTECTORS!I put this wallwart behind my bed, things are easier. It fits in a top outlet, leaving the bottom usable.AmazonBasics 3-Outlet Surge Protector with 2 USB Ports via Amazon
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