Best Slip ‘n Slide ever!

By Gareth Branwyn, MAKEJuly 14, 2010 at 01:00AM

slipNSlide_1.jpg
slipNSlide_2.jpg

MZ_Kids-Badge.gifInspired by the project of the same name in the Geek Dad book, Paul and his family decided to make the ultimate Slip ‘n Slide. They encountered a few snags along the way, but were satisfied with the results:

Overall, it was a nice DIY project that turned out to be a very impressive slide. For about the same price as you pay for those commercial Slip ‘n Slides, we made our own that will last a lot longer, is a lot longer and wider, and is sure to be a hit with the other kids in our family (and probably the parents too!).

Best Slip ‘n Slide Ever from @WiredGeekDad

More:
Make: Kids: An interview with GeekDad’s Ken Denmead

Read the Full Story » | More on MAKE » | Comments » |

Read more articles in Kids |

Digg this!

Old Spice Man Answers Tweets On YouTube—Ropes In Kevin Rose, Alyssa Milano, And Justine Bateman

By Erick Schonfeld, TechCrunchJuly 13, 2010 at 09:32PM

What if commercials really did talk to you? What if a familiar spokesperson addressed you by name and responded to your thoughts and feelings. In what is definitely one of the more creative social media ad campaigns in a while, Old Spice is doing just that. Its shirtless, muscled spokesman, the Old Spice Man, is shooting YouTube videos in response to people’s Tweets. Many oft these are well-known people with tons of followers like Kevin Rose and actress Alyssa Milano, who retweet the videos and spread them virally.

For instance, Digg founder Kevin Rose Tweeted out that he was sick, and in response the Old Spice Man created the video embedded above, in which he tells Rose that he has never had a fever himself because his body is “98 percent muscle.” He even talks to Rose in binary code so that Rose can understand, to which Rose responded on Twitter:

HOLY SH*T, best get well video EVER from the old spice man! https://bit.ly/dpSeOs

And:

OMG… the old spice guy is stalking me.. ha’!! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O44C765UiMw

The Old Spice Man also made multiple videos for actress Alyssa Milano, as well as ones for Olympic skater Apolo Ohno, actress Justine Bateman (who Tweeted, “Can the Old Spice guy do ads for ALL the world’s products?”), and Gizmodo. But he also responds to less famous people on Twitter like “Gabe” (see below).

The responses are often hilarious. (“My concern is that if I did ads for all the world’s products, it would cause global prosperity”). And they are certainly highly targeted. And it also just redefined the model for Promoted Trends. Old Spice is a promoted Trend, which takes you to the Old Spice Twitter account highlighting these videos as individual responses addressing each Twitter user who gets their own Old Spice commercial. The irony is that if Old Spice hadn’t paid to be a promoted Trend, it probably would have made it as a Trending Topic organically. But apparently you can’t appear twice as a Trend.

There are already more than 100 customized Old Spice responses on YouTube. We just wonder how long the Old Spice Man can keep it up. Below is a sample, along with the original TV commercial.

Food on the Table Builds Menus and Grocery Lists Based on Your Family’s Preferences [Groceries]

By Adam Pash, LifehackerJuly 13, 2010 at 06:00PM

Food on the Table Builds Menus and Grocery Lists Based on Your Family's PreferencesWebapp Food on the Table creates weekly meal plans and grocery lists based on food you (and your family) enjoy, then hooks into your local grocery stores to find the best deals on your groceries. It’s kind of brilliant.

After you sign up for the site, you’ll walk through a little setup in which you identify your main grocery store and check off the foods your family likes to eat (namely meats-it’d be nice to have more fruit and vegetable choices). Later, you can pick another nearby store if you want to compare prices.

Next, you’re presented with a list of items (based on your preferences) and asked: “What are you in the mood for this week?” Make your choices, select the number of meals you’re ready to plan, and choose what you care about most now: Saving time, money, health, or variety. At this point, the site searches through recipes that match your needs, prices out the cost of the meal for you, and lets you print out your shopping list.

Food on the Table Builds Menus and Grocery Lists Based on Your Family's Preferences

It’s hard to tell if something like this would work for you in the long term, but in theory, at least, Food on the Table is a really smart, useful idea. If you want more features than the basics mentioned above, you can upgrade to their premium account; the free version seems pretty serviceable as is, though. If you’ve used it—or something similar—in the past, let’s hear how it worked out for you in the comments.

Court Says FCC’s Indecency Policies Violate The First Amendment

By Mike Masnick, Techdirt.July 13, 2010 at 04:27PM

In a case that has been going on for many years now, it looks like the FCC’s indecency policy has been smacked down yet again, with the Second Circuit appeals court ruling it an unconstitutional violation of the First Amendment. If you haven’t been following the case, it involved FCC fines against various TV networks for “indecency,” over “fleeting expletives” — such as when Bono was quoted at an awards showing saying “this is really, really, fucking brilliant,” or when Paris Hilton, also at an awards show, was quoted saying “Have
you ever tried to get cow shit out of a Prada purse? It’s not so fucking simple.”

Initially the same appeals court found that the FCC’s rules were “arbitrary and capricious,” but chose not to tackle the First Amendment questions. The Supreme Court actually reversed that ruling, saying that the FCC has the right to make its own rules — arbitrary and capricious or not. However, it also did not investigate the First Amendment questions.

So, the case went back to the Second Circuit, which has once again smacked down the FCC, saying that even if the rules aren’t arbitrary and capricious, they do violate the First Amendment and create a real “chilling effect.”


The ruling is pretty thorough, going through the history of the FCC’s attempts to regulate indecency on the public airwaves, and how the courts have made sure that the FCC was quite limited in what it could do. It remains troubled by the fact that the FCC just sort of randomly changed its policies about a decade ago, and began more aggressively fining broadcasters for such “fleeting expletives,” but with the Supreme Court saying that “change” wasn’t a problem, the court still says that the First Amendment prevails here.

The decision is quite interesting, in that it notes that one of the reasons why the FCC was allowed to fine indecency on TV and radio was the “pervasiveness” of those media, but that in today’s internet-connected world, it makes less and less sense, since people who don’t hear cursing on TV will almost certainly hear it online or elsewhere. On top of that, it notes that technology has given new power to parents to block access to “mature” content, such that the FCC might not have to watch over everything so carefully anymore.

Furthermore, it focuses on the “vagueness doctrine,” in noting that if a rule against certain types of speech is too vague, it can create a real chilling effect on speech, as people don’t know where the boundaries are located. And here’s where it gets fun. The decision explores how the FCC decided that some words were indecent and others weren’t without explaining why:


The first problem arises in the FCC’s determination as to which words or expressions are patently
offensive. For instance, while the FCC concluded that “bullshit” in a “NYPD Blue” episode was
patently offensive, it concluded that “dick” and “dickhead” were not…. Other expletives such as “pissed off,” “up yours,” “kiss my ass,” and “wiping his ass” were also not found to be patently offensive. … The Commission
argues that its three-factor “patently offensive” test gives broadcasters fair notice of what it will
find indecent. However, in each of these cases, the Commission’s reasoning consisted of
repetition of one or more of the factors without any discussion of how it applied them. Thus, the
word “bullshit” is indecent because it is “vulgar, graphic and explicit” while the words
“dickhead” was not indecent because it was “not sufficiently vulgar, explicit, or graphic.” This
hardly gives broadcasters notice of how the Commission will apply the factors in the future.

The English language is rife with creative ways of depicting sexual or excretory organs
or activities, and even if the FCC were able to provide a complete list of all such expressions,
new offensive and indecent words are invented every day.

The court also notes that back when the FCC’s enforcement focused on George Carlin’s famous “seven dirty words,” no indecency actions were brought, because everyone knew what was and was not allowed — even if other terms were used instead:


This strategy had its
limitations — it meant that some indecent speech that did not employ these seven words slipped
through the cracks. However, it had the advantage of providing broadcasters with a clear list of
words that were prohibited. Not surprisingly, in the nine years between Pacifica and the FCC’s
abandonment of this policy, not a single enforcement action was brought. This could be because
we lived in a simpler time before such foul language was common. Or, it could be that the
FCC’s policy was sufficiently clear that broadcasters knew what was prohibited.

The court doesn’t buy the FCC’s argument that because broadcasters used other words instead, it had to make it’s policy more vague, and notes that this shows “a certain futility” in the FCC’s quixotic campaign against indecency. And then it adds that if things are always changing, it’s not fair for broadcasters:


The
observation that people will always find a way to subvert censorship laws may expose a certain
futility in the FCC’s crusade against indecent speech, but it does not provide a justification for
implementing a vague, indiscernible standard. If the FCC cannot anticipate what will be
considered indecent under its policy, then it can hardly expect broadcasters to do so.
And while
the FCC characterizes all broadcasters as consciously trying to push the envelope on what is
permitted, much like a petulant teenager angling for a later curfew, the Networks have expressed
a good faith desire to comply with the FCC’s indecency regime. They simply want to know with
some degree of certainty what the policy is so that they can comply with it. The First
Amendment requires nothing less.

The decision also notes that the FCC seems to randomly enforce its own rules:


Even the risk of such subjective, content-based
decision-making raises grave concerns under the First Amendment. Take, for example, the disparate treatment of “Saving Private Ryan” and the documentary, “The Blues.” The FCC
decided that the words “fuck” and “shit” were integral to the “realism and immediacy of the film
experience for viewers” in “Saving Private Ryan,” but not in “The Blues.” ….
We query how fleeting expletives could be more essential to the “realism” of a fictional movie
than to the “realism” of interviews with real people about real life events
, and it is hard not to
speculate that the FCC was simply more comfortable with the themes in “Saving Private Ryan,”
a mainstream movie with a familiar cultural milieu, than it was with “The Blues,” which largely
profiled an outsider genre of musical experience. But even if there were a perfectly benign way
of explaining these particular outcomes, nothing would prevent the FCC from applying its
indecency policy in a discriminatory manner in the future.

Finally, the court notes that these chilling effects are very, very real and can already be seen:


For instance, several CBS affiliates declined to air the Peabody Award-winning “9/11”
documentary, which contains real audio footage — including occasional expletives — of
firefighters in the World Trade Center on September 11th. Although the documentary had
previously aired twice without complaint, following the Golden Globes Order affiliates could no
longer be sure whether the expletives contained in the documentary could be found indecent.

The court says it’s possible the FCC could create a policy that is acceptable under the First Amendment, but this one does not qualify. I’m sure this will be appealed to the Supreme Court as well, but in the meantime, it’s a pretty big smackdown for the FCC’s attempt to fine indecency.

Permalink | Comments | Email This Story



The Essential Guide To Digital Photography [PDF]

By Jack Cola, MakeUseOfJuly 13, 2010 at 03:00PM

You may think that picking up a digital camera, turning it on, and taking the photo is all that you need to know about digital photography. Think again, as there is a whole heap more to learn that you might not even realise.

To add to MakeUseOf’s latest PDF collection, Bakari Chavanu from Mac Photography Tips has combined his knowledge to produce an 8000+ word, 59 page PDF eBook.

 

It’s jammed packed full of useful information for all type of photographers – from beginners photographers to advance photographers.


Inside, you will find information about:

  • The different types of digital cameras to choose from
  • What digital camera is right for you
  • What to look for when buying your digital camera
  • Accessories that you should have for your digital camera
  • Features that you should know about your camera

But wait, there’s more. There are also 5 beginner exercises for you to complete to help you become a professional photographer, and helpful instructions and information about editing your photo’s to make them even more magical.

photography_display

If you have a digital camera, want to become a professional photographer, or you are already a professional photographer, then you do not want miss out on downloading The Essential Guide To Digital Photography.

You do not want to miss out on this great eBook, so download it now for free, or read it online at Scribd.

NEW: Download MakeUseOf iPhone App. FREE!

Similar MakeUseOf Articles

10 Quick tips for Photographing Antelope Canyons

By Darren Rowse, Digital Photography SchoolJuly 13, 2010 at 10:18AM

A Guest post by Amar Ramesh.

Antelope Canyons in page Arizona is one of the most exquisite gifts of nature that is generally overlooked by people traveling to Arizona.

photographing Antelope Canyons 1.jpg

The sandstone canyons lit from the streak of light passing right through the slots makes it one the most serene places in the world. Located at the Navajo Tribal Park near Lake Powell, these canyons have narrow paths, created by water flowing through them for millions of years. It’s a photographer’s paradise. Listed below are some the quick and easy tips that would help you take better pictures in these canyons.

1. Plan ahead

Like for any travel, do your homework and get to know the place. There are two canyons – Upper and Lower – both located in Page, AZ. Mid-day(11am-1pm) between the months of March and October is the best time to photograph these slots, with the shafts of light shining down from the openings above. There are photography tours available in both upper and lower canyons. Even though it’s a little expensive than the ordinary tour, it’s totally worth it. The guides who take you along the photography tour generally do a wonderful job helping you ‘chase’ the light. I highly recommend it.

2. Gear

Use the widest angle lens from your arsenal. You have to capture a wider area with light streaks and you absolutely need a wide angle lens to do this. If you don’t own one, try renting it. Tripod is a must and make sure you turn off image stabilization. A remote trigger would help remove the vibration caused by pressing the shutter button.

photographing Antelope Canyons 2.jpg

3. Try not to change lens

An important note to remember if you are shooting with a DSLR is that you should not change your lenses inside these canyons because of the amount of dust in the air. Trust me you wouldn’t want to change your lenses inside the canyons. If you have a second camera, by all means, take it along with a different lens on it. You will get a different perspective. And yes, carry a cloth to clean the lenses frequently.

photographing Antelope Canyons 3.jpg

4. Make use of your Live view

The canyons are generally crowded. People keep streaming in and out, in large groups. So expect people both in front and behind you. With so much going around its easy to be engrossed into the view finder. So advice would be try using the live view, as well as an articulating screen (some of the newest cameras have them). When you are ready to take the shot, you can quickly check the view finder and make sure everything is good and press the shutter. This will help you be aware of things happening around you.

photographing Antelope Canyons 4.jpg

5. Go Manual mode and shoot RAW

Set the camera in manual mode, shoot RAW. f11 to f18 is the sweet spot for aperture and open the shutter anywhere between 2 and 6 seconds depending on the variation in light to get the best shots. Frequently check your histogram to see how you are doing.

photographing Antelope Canyons 5.jpg

6. Look up

There will be times when you have to wait for a group of people to move before you can take a picture. So try to use that time to come up with different compositions. Look up and try to compose shots. Also remember including people in the picture is not always a bad thing to do.

photographing Antelope Canyons 6.jpg

7. Look for hidden slots

These canyons are spiritual to the Navajo tribes. They talk about the forms and shapes carved into the rock by water that flows through the canyons. One of the greatest pleasure in shooting these canyons is to see the unseen, find what is hidden, and put them in the center stage and show it in pictures. The stone in the picture below has taken a form of an eagle with open wings. To see more pictures of hidden forms visit my blogpost “Finding the hidden creatures

photographing Antelope Canyons 7.jpg

8. Try to put people in the picture.

Bring some life to the pictures by placing a human subject. Here in this picture I requested a traveler from South America dressed in contrasting colors to be photographed which made the picture interesting.

photographing Antelope Canyons 8.jpg

9. High contrast

Look for frames with the most contrast to make it all that more interesting. You can find so many frames with high contrast between the darkest and brightest regions because of the shafts of light that penetrate from above make the center areas of the canyons brighter and the sides darker.

photographing Antelope Canyons 9.jpg

10. Carry a water bottle

Last but not least food is not allowed inside, so if you are planning to spend a good time in these canyons, have your food before entering the canyons and make sure to carry a water bottle with you.

photographing Antelope Canyons 10.jpg

Amar Ramesh is an emerging photographer from Redmond WA, USA. Photography, to him is a passion with infinite opportunities and he loves to share the lessons and tips that he learned with others. Please visit his Facebook Page for more. He is also in Flickr | Twitter | Portfolio.

Post from: Digital Photography School – Photography Tips.

dpsbook.png

10 Quick tips for Photographing Antelope Canyons

Keep Your Eyes on Their Feet to Cut Through Crowds Like Butter [Crowds]

By Adam Pash, LifehackerJuly 28, 2010 at 11:45AM

crowd.jpgYou know when you’re walking through a large crowd and end up in step with someone else, then have to do that all-too-familiar back-and-forth dance until someone breaks free and you go around each other? Wired wants to help you avoid this.

Over at their How-To Wiki, tech culture site Wired offers a few quick tips for walking through crowds without getting caught in that dance or running into people. Some of the tips may sound obvious (e.g., “watch where you walk”), but it’s also full of good reason. For example:

To get on autopilot, pedestrian-style, look down at the feet of the people around you. The head and torso are lagging indicators and often give you bad information with regards to the speed and direction people are traveling. All that information is in the feet.

  • Don’t look directly forward. Your gaze is generally perpendicular to your body, usually 90 degrees. Reduce that angle, making it tighter as your space becomes more crowded.
  • Be aware of how crowded your “personal zone” is — use a 6-foot radius as a rule of thumb. Less than six people isn’t too crowded, so move as you would normally, but watch people’s feet as they enter your zone.
  • Evade, don’t invade. Change direction often to slip behind people rather than rushing to cut them off.

Hit up the full post over at Wired for more suggestions. Got your own tried-and-true tips for making it through a crowded space? Tell us about them in the comments. Photo by Mr. T in DC.

Alien Swarm – A Top-Down Open-Source Shooter By Valve

By Simon Slangen, MakeUseOfJuly 27, 2010 at 02:31PM

shooter gameA lot of die-hard gamers might have heard of the Alien Swarm shooter game in the past. The game originated as a full-conversion mod for the popular arena shooter Unreal Tournament 2004; completely developed by a score of community developers.

Those same developers were subsequently hired by Valve, the top game publisher that’s behind Half Life 2 and Team Fortress 2. While working on projects like Left 4 Dead 2 and Portal 2, in the background they were rebuilding their debut shooter game from scratch.

Alien Swarm

Steam (Valve’s gaming network) just recently revealed the existence of that remake, mere days before the game launched last Monday. But the accompanying news was even more shocking. This fully-featured game would be released for free.

What can you expect? Think swarms upon swarms of magnificently brutal aliens and empowering online (co-operative) gameplay. There’s not all that much of a story, just fast-packed shoot-em-up levels. This is a game you should play this summer – no matter if you’re usually a freeware or retail gamer. The only detectable downside is that this shooter game is only available on Windows PC’s.

4 Player Co-Op Killing Spree

Alien Swarm offers two modes of gameplay; the less important offline training mode and the online campaign mode. Up to four players can join up to compete and join hands against the alien horde. In that, it’s very similar to Left 4 Dead (2). In other things, not so much. There’s bound to be less randomization in the levels, in a way enabling you to learn from failed experiences, and develop tactics to beat the levels.

shooter game

How difficult those levels will be is entirely up to you. Alien Swarm offers 4 degrees of difficulty; Easy, Normal, Hard and Insane. You’ll be assisted in your post-modern quest by over 40 different weapons, with an absurd amount of additional weapon configurations and other unlockable items.

shooter games

There are in total four unique IAF (interstellar armed forces) player classes to choose from: medic, tech, officer and special weapons. And each of those feature two different characters. Create an IAF squad with your friends and make those aliens regret they got up in the morning.

Free, Open-Source & With Separate SDK

Actually, Steam didn’t just announce the game to be free. Yes, you can download the game free of charge. But you can also download the entire source code. This is unprecedented for a major game company like Valve, and rocked the socks off of large parts of the internet. This means that everyone can view the original programming that went into make this game. Everyone can adapt the code, and make spin-offs.

shooter game

Although the game launched with 7 ‘official’ levels, you can also download a level creation kit. For those interested, this is not the standard kit that you’ll see included with other Valve games, but a stand-alone one. This includes a tile-based map generation tool, allowing you to randomly generate rooms in your home-brewed levels.

Are you excited yet? That’s right! What do you think of Alien Swarm, or it going open-source from day one? Let us know in the comments!


Hey Facebookers, make sure to check out MakeUseOf page on Facebook. Over 24,000 fans already!


 

 

Similar MakeUseOf Articles

Brush Up on Your Mac Terminal Kung-Fu [Terminal]

By Kevin Purdy, LifehackerJuly 26, 2010 at 10:30AM

Brush Up on Your Mac Terminal Kung-FuThe Super User forums has a collection of tips and paste-able commands for Mac OS X’s Terminal that are, by turns, brilliant, funny, and obscure but great. Suggestions include quickly checking what apps are eating your memory (top -o vsize), run a Spotlight-style search from the command line (mdfind), and a clever little script that one user put together to trick his wife into thinking a MacBook has overheated and needs to be shut down—so he can grab it back. [Super User via Daring Fireball]

Judge rules that circumventing DRM is not illegal

By Sebastian Anthony, Download SquadJuly 26, 2010 at 09:00AM

Filed under: ,

In what will surely become a landmark case — or at least a massive thorn in the MPAA and RIAA’s clubbed, pygmy feet — a judge has ruled that bypassing DRM via hacking, reverse engineering or any other means is not in itself illegal.

The case itself ruled that General Electric, in using hacked security dongles to repair some uninterruptible power supplies produced by another company, did not violate the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Why? Because the end goal was legal. If the hacked dongles had been used for the forces of evil, the story would be different.

While this doesn’t sound immediately applicable to DRM-protected software, music and movies, bear in mind that the DMCA is the foundation for every spurious copyright claim made by RIAA, MPAA and the myriad of other digital rights groups. In essence, this ruling means that you’re free to break DRM on media that you own. No longer is it illegal to rip your own DVDs or crippled audio CDs onto your hard disk. I think there might also be some implication for the godawful DRM used on contemporary games like Assassin’s Creed 2 (and if you’re a lawyer, please leave a comment!)

In case you were wondering, this doesn’t make piracy legal. It just means that bypassing DRM to reach a legal goal — i.e. fair use of things you own — is now protected by common law.

[via electronista]

Judge rules that circumventing DRM is not illegal originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 26 Jul 2010 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Add to digg
Add to del.icio.us
Add to Google
Add to StumbleUpon
Add to Facebook
Add to Reddit
Add to Technorati



Digital Millennium Copyright ActDigital rights managementIntellectual propertyMotion Picture Association of AmericaLaw