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August 27, 2005Getting Started in Electronics
The book uses intuitive examples to explain previously impenetrable concepts such as capacitance, impedance, and inductance, and does a great job of explaining how semiconductors work. Even better, the last section of the book has over 100 easy-tomake circuits that beep, blink, and perform other fun stuff. This book manages to make electronics seem both accessible and magical at the same time. Many people I know speak fondly of this book as a big inspiration when they were younger. Link August 25, 2005DC's Greatest Imaginary Stories
I imagine the writers in those days were tired of grim bad guy vs good guy stories, so they took every opportunity to concoct outlandish stories, in which superheroes either died, had their cover blown, or entered a wacky parallel universe. Mainstream comics were a lot more fun back then. The superhero comics of today are crippled by the humorlessness and self-importance. I'm glad to see that DC is digging into its vaults to revive these treasures. Link August 22, 2005Radtech BT500 tiny bluetooth mouse
August 19, 2005Naked City by Weegee
One Two Three ... infinity
For example he wrote a no-doubt apocryphal story about King Shiram of India, who was so pleased with his grand vizier, Sissa Ben Dahir, for inventing the game of chess, that the king asked the vizier what he'd like for a reward. The vizier told the king he'd like one grain of wheat for the first square on the board, two grains for the second square, four grains for the third square, eight grains for the forth square, and so on, doubling the number of grains on each square for all 64 squares on the board. The king thought about it for a second and said, "You got a deal." Gamow describes how the king order his servants to bring in a bag of wheat, thinking that there would be more than enough to fulfill his vizier's request. But the entire bag was emptied on the 20th square. He soon realized that he'd empty the palace's entire supply of wheat before coming even close to the end. As it turned out, Gamow writes, "the amount requested by the grand vizier was that of the world's wheat production for the period of some two thousand years!" The entire book is filled with awe-inspiring anecdotes like this, which had the result of stretching my mind more than anything I'd learned in school up to that point.
August 18, 2005A Princess of Mars and The Jet Propelled CouchI read A Princess of Mars, Edgar Rice Burrough's tale of adventure on the red planet, when I was in junior high school. Dejah Thoris, the princess in the novel, may have been my first crush. I remember being thrilled when I read the following passage, in which John Carter describes seeing Dejah Thoris for the first after she had been taken prisoner by the green Martians.
A few years later, I read The Fifty Minute Hour: A Collection of True Psychoanalytic Tales by Robert Lindner. It was a fascinating book, and the last chapter, called "The Jet Propelled Couch" was particularly interesting. It was about a Los Alamos physicist who had been sent to Lindner because he was acting strangely at work, often going into a trance-lie state. Because the physicist had a high level security clearance, his superiors were quite worried about his odd behavior.
I just re-read A Princess of Mars, prepared to be utterly disappointed. But I loved it just as much as I did when I was 12 years old. Burrough's description of the Martian animals and societies, particularly the hideous six-limbed green Martians', is a hoot, and the plot moves along at a fast clip. It unfolds much like a contemporary science fiction movie. It's fallen out of copyright, and you can download it for free from Project Gutenburg's site. The Fifty Minute Hour A Princess of Mars August 17, 2005Handmade Modern
Because I edit a how-to magazine (Make), I have learned to appreciate well-designed step-by-step instructions, and I give this book an A+. The photography is excellent, as are the instructions themselves. I haven't made any of the projects, but I plan to try the Eames-like room divider, the storage bench, and the planter bench. Prepare to be amazed by this book. August 16, 2005The R. Crumb Handbook
I don't think this book is a good introduction to Crumb. If you're not familiar with his work, I suggest you start out with Vol 4 of The Complete Crumb Comics. But if you are a Crumb fan, you'll love this fat (440 pages!) book filled with Crumb art and text. As a bonus, the book comes with a 20-song CD of Crumb's music, which ranges from old timey novelty jazz to turn of the last century European folk music. Considering that a music CD typically costs more than this book-and-CD combo, The R. Crumb Handbook is a great deal. Link August 12, 2005Password Plus
To use it, you launch the program and enter a master password. That gives you access to all the records. I use it all the time to get my credit card numbers to make online purchases. One great feature is the way it syncs the data back and forth between my Palm OS and my home computer. Earlier this week I went to a Chinese restaurant to pick up some food I'd ordered on the phone and I forgot my wallet. But I talked them into selling me the meal by reading my credit card number from my PDA. Link August 11, 2005Hell's Angels: The Strange and Terrible Saga of the Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs
August 10, 2005Revolution in The ValleyAndy Hertzfeld is the co-creator of the Mac, and a natural storyteller. His book Revolution in the Valley is Hertzfeld's chronological collection of amusing anecdotes having to do with the the development of the first Macintosh computers. He wisely focused on the people who were involved in the project and not the technology. If you are looking for good gossip, and you've come to the right place. Here's an excerpt from the time Steve Jobs presented a Mac to an uninterested Mick Jagger in 1984: Link August 08, 2005The Cute Manifesto
Kochalka developed his talents in the world of self-published mini-comics, and even though he now has a publisher, he still thinks like a self-publisher. In a recent interview in The Comics Reporter, Kochalka said, "I feel like I can do anything I want. Which is the best thing about being an artist, that you can do anything you want. As soon as you start feeling you can't do whatever you want because you're afraid how the readers are going to react, then it's just a job. I don't want to have a job." Fortunately, when Kochalka does whatever he wants, it results in good stuff. Link August 05, 2005L. A. Bizzaro The Insider's Guide to the Obscure, the Absurd and the Perverse in Los Angeles
My friend Matt Maranian knows this. In 1997 he and Tony Lovett wrote a guide to Los Angeles called L. A. Bizzaro! The Insider's Guide to the Obscure, the Absurd and the Perverse in Los Angeles. I defy you to read this and not be surprised, entertained, and eager to head out the door to explore the places covered in this book. For example, there's Clifton's cafeteria, a "delighfully dingy wonderland," opened in the 1931 with a cedar forest complete with cascading waterfalls and stuffed forest creatures. It's still in operation today. Then there's Tri-Ess Sciences near the Burbank Airport -- a chemical supply house that caters to the special effects industry. There's also the mind-blowing Bob Baker Marionette Theater ("the oldest operating puppet theater in the country"), located under a freeway ramp in a decrepit industrial area of LA. I've enjoyed Baker's skillful and almost-psychedelic shows with my kids three times so far, and I'm looking forward to returning soon. If you're in LA and have access to a car and this book, you'll never be bored. Link August 04, 2005Moleskine notebooks
After a couple of weeks, I decided to go ahead and just start using it. And I became hooked. The pocket sized version cost around $12 and lasted several months. It was silly not to use it as my regular note taking book. The books are also very rugged. Last week, I left one of my Moleskines outside for a week. The sprinkers hit it every day. It was waterlogged when I found it. The pages with ink pen note were kind of smeared, but still legible. The penciled notes were fine. I fanned the book open and left it to dry in the 100-degree heat of our porch for a few days. The pages are kind of warped, making it look swollen, but the cover and binding are in excellent shape. I like it even better this way -- less precious looking. I've incorporated Moleskines into my daily life. I keep a blank art paper sketchbook (80 pages, 5.25" x 8.25") for sketching, a ruled notebook (240 pages, 5.25" x 8.25") for taking notes, and a pocket ruled notebook (192 pages, 3½" x 5½") for my to-do list. The company has started making a less-expensive line of notebooks, called the Cahier line, but I'm sticking with the sturdy orginals. Pranks
I especially enjoyed the interview with Jeffrey Vallance, who once took a frozen chicken that he'd bought at a supermarket to a pet cemetery and, with a straight face, told the people who worked there that he wanted to arrange a memorial service for his departed pet Chicken (he told them its name was Blinky). He ordered a small powder blue casket with pink satin lining ("Blinky was starting to thaw, so she was placed on a paper towel so that the moisture would not seep under the satin".) He also order an engraved grave marker which read "Blinkly, The Friendly Hen". Another time, Vallance dressed up like an electrician, complete with nametag, and went into the Los Angeles Country Art Museum, where he replaced electrical outlet covers with ones that had his paintings on them. He then sent out invitations to people announcing his debut show at the museum. Link August 02, 2005Ed Emberley drawing books
What makes these books so wonderful is the way Emberley uses simple shapes to construct appealing and lively animals, vehicles, people, monsters, plants, and other things. His creations are witty and funny, and his unique step-by-step presentation yields a fool-proof method for copying his work. I find myself pulling his books off my shelf at least a couple of times a week. My 7-year-old daughter goes to a lot of birthday parties and I like to draw the birthday cards for the presents she gives her friends. More often than not, I swipe Emberley characters for the card. Link August 01, 2005Amazing Bug Zapper
My hunting method is primitive but effective: I swing wildly in the general direction of the tiny winged vermin. The heavy, stupid flies are almost too easy to zap; I prefer the smaller, quieter flies that tease me by alighting on an armchair or counter, only to flit away in the nick of time. But no matter what kind of fly I’m after, the end game never changes — The wires touch the fly; there’s a tiny spark and a crackle, and the fly drops to the ground, inert. Haematopota pluvialis: prepare to meet thy doom. Link |
ABOUT MAD PROFESSORMark Frauenfelder's Mad Professor Bizarre Science Experiments Book. RECENT ENTRIESGetting Started in Electronics DC's Greatest Imaginary Stories Radtech BT500 tiny bluetooth mouse Naked City by Weegee One Two Three ... infinity A Princess of Mars and The Jet Propelled Couch Handmade Modern The R. Crumb Handbook Password Plus Hell's Angels: The Strange and Terrible Saga of the Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs ARCHIVES BY MONTHARCHIVES BY CATEGORY |
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