By mustardhamsters at 9:28 pm Friday, Dec 16
New post.
By mustardhamsters at 8:57 pm Tuesday, Dec 13
By mustardhamsters at 8:48 pm Tuesday, Dec 13
test
By mustardhamsters at 8:44 pm Tuesday, Dec 13
This thing should be tweeted!
By mustardhamsters at 9:46 pm Wednesday, Dec 7
post
By mustardhamsters at 7:48 pm Wednesday, Dec 7
porp
By mustardhamsters at 7:31 pm Wednesday, Dec 7
horp
By mustardhamsters at 7:31 pm Wednesday, Dec 7
torp
By mustardhamsters at 7:29 pm Wednesday, Dec 7
peraderpsper
By mustardhamsters at 7:27 pm Wednesday, Dec 7
perpaderp
By mustardhamsters at 10:44 pm Tuesday, Dec 6
This gonna work?
By mustardhamsters at 10:36 pm Wednesday, Nov 2
Not sure why it needs permissions to this folder, let's find out!
By mustardhamsters at 6:02 am Tuesday, Oct 25
Robert Venditti and Mike Huddleston's stand-alone graphic novel The Homeland Directive is a tight, suspenseful technothriller (in Bruce Sterling's definition of the term: "a science fiction story with the president in it"). Mysterious government spooks are hunting a pair of CDC epidemiologists. One is murdered, the other, Dr Laura Regan, is framed for a variety of crimes and barely escapes in the company of rogue spooks who spirit her away to a safe house. The story that unfolds -- a plot to terrorize America into accepting an otherwise unthinkable authoritarian rule in the name of fighting terrorism -- is taut, filled with great spycraft and action sequences. A great, paranoid read for the modern age.
By mustardhamsters at 5:59 am Monday, Oct 24
Scored is Lauren McLaughlin's latest YA science fiction novel, a remarkable book about surveillance, class, and culture. It's McLaughlin's third novel, and her best so far (though the previous two were very good).
In Scored, the American middle class is no more, wiped out by economic catastrophe. Social entrepreneurs bent on restoring class mobility have established "scoring," filling whole towns with spy-eyes that watch kids' every move, publicly assigning aggregate scores to their behavior according to secret, self-modifying algorithms. The top-scoring kids get full ride scholarships to top universities, and are on their way to social mobility. Bottom scorers are frozen out entirely, while those a little farther up are able to find work in the military.
Imani LeMonde is a high-school kid in small-town New England, a poor kid whose parents scrape by with a tiny, marginal marina that serves the ultra-rich who holiday there. When the story opens, Imani is a "90," scored in the highest band of children, and on her way to a better life. But Imani refuses to cut off ties with her childhood best friend, a girl who has taken up romantically with an "unscored" -- someone whose parents have not opted for the surveillance system -- and her association with an anti-social element causes her score to plummet.
From here, McLaughlin launches into a tale that is simultaneously adventurous and thought-provoking. McLaughlin's characters -- a tenured refusenik social studies teacher, a crusading lawyer, a driven principal, and a collection of kids from across the score-tribes and outside the scoring system -- all serve to illuminate the pros and cons of surveillance and "meritocracy." McLaughlin is nuanced and delicate in her touch, and manages to weave in questions about caste, class, race and fairness as she explores her subject. She does great justice to both sides of the debate, painting an all-too-plausible scenario for the remaking of society around an idea of "transparency" that is optional in name only, as anyone who opts out is instantly suspect.
Most of all, McLaughlin captures the way that being watched and judged changes our behavior for better and worse -- driving us to do our best while draining our lives of experimentation and authenticity.
Scored is a book that will spark dozens of conversations -- conversations we desperately need to be having. This book is the antidote to the pointless hand-wringing about Facebook, reality TV, and the PATRIOT Act, a chance to get out of the trite cul-de-sac where these conversations always end up, and to move into green pastures.
Scored
By mustardhamsters at 10:47 pm Friday, Oct 21
please ignore test
By mustardhamsters at 1:57 pm Friday, Oct 21

Delia Creates made this awesome kids' Frankenstein's monster hat for her son, Owen. She started with an off the peg Frankenstein suit and then modded for great excellence.
(via Craftzine)
By mustardhamsters at 12:57 pm Friday, Oct 21

Tom Deininger is an assemblage artist who arranges bewilderingly large collections of odd plastic tchotchkes into gorgeous pieces, including this Monet-like masterpiece.
(via Craft)
By mustardhamsters at 11:57 am Friday, Oct 21

Christine Chin's "Sentient Kitchen" sculptures imagine a whole set of kitchenware sculpted to resemble body parts. The hairy nostrils are a really good touch -- indeed, the whole collection uses sparse hairs to great effect.
(via Street Anatomy)
Sentient Kitchen: Fleshy Kitchen Accessories [people.hws.edu]
By mustardhamsters at 11:22 am Friday, Oct 21

Dan Goldman's Red Light Properties is a serial webcomic about a Florida real-estate brokerage that specializes in exorcising haunted houses and then listing them for cheap. Goldman (who created the fantastic
08 graphic novel) takes a somewhat lighthearted premise and uses it as contrast to make the fundamental spookiness of his stories stand out in stark relief. Goldman's ghost stories made the hairs on the back of my neck prickle, while the bawdy slapstick interludes served only to lure me into dropping my guard for the next scare. Highly recommended.
By mustardhamsters at 10:14 am Friday, Oct 21

From the Aug, 1956 issue of Scientific American, this sweet advertisement for the Univac: "Leading companies throughout the country have learned that Univac has become synonymous with enlightened management. And Univac savings more than justify its use for electronic control of management problems. Find out how typical users have put Univac to work in virtually all types of commercial data-processing. We