Hi - I just wanted to announce that Merritt Microscopy is having a
hands-on demo of the Hitachi TM3000 Tabletop Scanning Electron
Microscope, Mondays through Thursdays starting this week, June 17th to
June 20 and next week, June 24 to June 27. The event is open to the
general public, with absolutely no prior microscope experience needed,
and whatever samples you wish to bring.
Hence, if there are any fungi or anything else you've been wanting to
get EM images of, this is a great opportunity to do so.
Here's the poster I put together, and some maps giving the location of
campus. We are on the second floor of the D building, in Room D243.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/148359131/Hitachi-SEM-Demohttp://goo.gl/maps/v8v4mhttp://www.merritt.edu/sites/default/files/campusmap2008.pdf
(Note that the second map is oriented with South on the up side, which
is the reverse orientation of other maps.)
Peter
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> From: Jacob Appelbaum <jacob(a)appelbaum.net>
> Date: June 17, 2013, 6:45:23 AM PDT
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech(a)lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] Help test the new Tor Browser!
> Reply-To: liberationtech <liberationtech(a)lists.stanford.edu>
>
> Hi,
>
> I'm really excited to say that Tor Browser has had some really important
> changes. Mike Perry has really outdone himself - from deterministic
> builds that allow us to verify that he is honest to actually having
> serious usability improvements. I really mean it - the new TBB is
> actually awesome. It is blazing fast, it no longer has the sometimes
> confusing Vidalia UI, it is now fast to start, it now has a really nice
> splash screen, it has a setup wizard - you name it - nearly everything
> that people found difficult has been removed, replaced or improved.
> Hooray for Mike Perry and all that helped him!
>
> Here is Mike's email:
>
> https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-talk/2013-June/028440.html
>
> Here is the place to download it:
>
> https://people.torproject.org/~mikeperry/tbb-3.0alpha1-builds/official/
>
> Please test it and please please tell us how we might improve it!
>
> All the best,
> Jacob
> --
> Too many emails? Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by emailing moderator at companys(a)stanford.edu or changing your settings at https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech
you have a number of ways to contribute:
1) online (via wepay): https://sudoroom.org/
2) online (via gittip): https://www.gittip.com/sudoroom/
3) in person (anytime): please drop cash or checks into the clear plastic
box by the door that goes to the elevator
4) in person (at meetings): bring cash or checks to wed. meetings.
and certainly i barely need to remind you of our *precarious month to month
financial situation*.
pay your dues!
FYI.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: howard dyckoff <howarddy(a)gmail.com>
Date: Mon, Jun 17, 2013 at 2:41 PM
Subject: [OpenOakland Brigade] Know anyone using BitCoin?
To:
Have you or someone you know had experiences with Bit Coin? Are you
willing to share those experiences, even annonyously?
I'm preparing an article for Oakland Local on the digital currency.
I'm interested in :
-- the ease of use
-- places to use it
-- concerns about security
-- and if you'd recommend it for others.
Howard
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this is relevant to our interests!
- marina
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Praveen Sinha <dmhomee(a)gmail.com>
Date: Mon, Jun 17, 2013 at 12:02 PM
Subject: [lol-hackers] awesome mozilla paid fellowship
To: lol-hackers <lol-hackers(a)googlegroups.com>, Vera Yin <verayin(a)gmail.com>
This joint knight foundation + mozilla fellowship looks really awesome and
I almost want to apply myself. Stephany sent this over because they are
encouraging under representated people to apply:
http://mozillaopennews.org/fellowships/
--
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Hello everyone,
Marina and I invite you to participate in Workshop Weekend!
We're teaching “Computer Dissection Laboratory” on Sunday, June 23rd at 1:00pm.
Workshop Weekend is a weekend-long event of short, 1 to 3 hour long
workshops in subjects from exploring electronics to decorating cake
with gumpaste flowers, and from 3D printing to learning to program and
make ice cream with liquid nitrogen! It's a festival of learning with
more than 20 hands-on workshops to choose from, all taking place June
22-23 in downtown Oakland -- pay $40 and take as many workshops as you
like! The weekend is a family-friendly gathering for kids and adults
alike, bringing together arts, crafts and making workshops, all taught
by the bay area’s best instructors.
Use our coupon code to get $10 off admission: HILARY613
Here’s a list of the workshops being offered:
Hands-on Genetic Engineering
Learn DIY Doll-making
Taste Hacking
Computer Dissection
Arduino Automation Basics
Hands-on Nutrition
Make a Speaker from Scratch
DIY Coffee Roasting
Hands-on Anatomy
Build a Beetlebot Robot
Liquid Nitrogen Ice Cream
Arduino Programming
...and many more!
Register by going to http://workshopweekend.net/oakland/catalog
We hope to see you there!
Hilary and Marina
---
Hilary Naylor
www.a2zed.us
Oakland CA
There's an active Mesh Network project in Oakland once again, the central
locus of which is at Sudoroom.
On Mon, Jun 17, 2013 at 3:05 AM, howard dyckoff <howarddy(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Most of the Mesh network activity was previously confined to SF.
>
> I think there was some activity in North Oakland 2-3 years back.
>
> If I recall correctly, the cells have to be within half a mile or a third
> of a mile of each other.... pls verify, I'm sure the range has increased
> gradually.
>
> And I think the min cost of a local neighborhood transmitter and antennae
> was between $500 and $1000 a few years ago. I hope that pricing is better
> now.
>
> The problem, I think , is that the areas most in need of this have fewer
> and less successful neighborhood associations and fewer households that
> could afford to setup mesh nodes.
>
> That's unfortunate since this could provide really inexpensive internet
> access for everyone.
>
> I am sure "Business Improvement Districts" could be involved, but there
> are few of them operating in East and West Oakland. We'd need a big
> grant to cover those areas -- or a lot of neighborhood organizing.
>
> And we'd have to plan for some of the equipment being stolen. As an
> example, the new library at 81st Ave, where we held an event earlier this
> year, had many of its computers stolen a few weeks after it opened.
>
> But I don't want to be too negative here. I would definitely support this
> effort.
>
>
>
>
> On Sat, Jun 15, 2013 at 7:14 PM, Eddie Tejeda <eddie(a)codeforamerica.org>wrote:
>
>> Hey everyone!
>>
>> Checkout this cool project by Preston Rhea, from Open Technology
>> Institute at the New America Foundation. He's thinking that Oakland will be
>> one of the pilot cities. There are existing local mesh network projects in
>> the area, right? People know how those projects are doing? This could be a
>> collaborative opportunity.
>>
>>
>> http://crowdhitch.millennialtrain.co/campaign/detail/1330
>>
>>
>> The project is to spread locally-managed community wireless mesh
>>> networks around the country. I'll teach local technologists and community
>>> organizers how to use regular Wi-Fi routers and free, open source software
>>> to build their own community Internet infrastructure.
>>
>>
>>
>>>
>>> The project will use Commotion <http://commotionwireless.net/>, a free,
>>> open source software project designed to make it easy for anyone to set up
>>> their own mesh network. We'll share tools and methods for participatory
>>> technology pedagogy, and the routers that we set up together will remain
>>> with the locals to seed their own mesh networks. With these seeds spread,
>>> people in each city can continue to grow locally-managed Internet networks
>>> and spur innovation on a shared platform accessible to any resident.
>>
>>
>> --
>> Eddie A. Tejeda
>> @eddietejeda
>> 2012 Fellow, Code for America
>> http://codeforamerica.org
>>
>> --
>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
>> "OpenOakland" group.
>> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
>> email to openoakland+unsubscribe(a)googlegroups.com.
>> To post to this group, send email to openoakland(a)googlegroups.com.
>> To view this discussion on the web visit
>> https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/openoakland/CAALX_7Y--m8x0%3DnuHdvQWAOCRJ…
>> .
>> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.
>>
>>
>>
>
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "OpenOakland" group.
> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
> email to openoakland+unsubscribe(a)googlegroups.com.
> To post to this group, send email to openoakland(a)googlegroups.com.
> To view this discussion on the web visit
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> .
>
> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.
>
>
>
--
Tony Barreca
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/tonybarreca
Skype: tonybarreca
Twitter: tbarreca
Mobile: (510) 710-5864
Wouldn't it be cute if the writers group could write a hit album with Sudo kids radio like all the top 40 pop factories do with their manufactured stars? It's Sudo room additive music engineering !!!
---
Romy Ilano
Founder of Snowyla
http://www.snowyla.com
romy(a)snowyla.com
Begin forwarded message:
> From: Romy Ilano <romy.ilano(a)gmail.com>
> Date: June 16, 2013, 3:00:32 PDT
> To: Romy Ilano <romy(a)snowyla.com>
> Subject: How Much Does It Cost To Make A Hit Song? : Planet Money : NPR
>
> http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2011/07/05/137530847/how-much-does-it-cost-t…
>
> How Much Does It Cost To Make A Hit Song?
>
>
> Courtesy Universal
> Getting a song on the pop charts takes big money.
>
> Def Jam started paying for Rihanna's recent single, "Man Down," more than a year ago. In March of 2010, the label held a writing camp in L.A. to create the songs for Rihanna's album, Loud.
>
> At a writing camp, a record label hires the best music writers in the country and drops them into the nicest recording studios in town for about two weeks. It's a temporary version of the old music-industry hit factories, where writers and producers cranked out pop songs.
>
> "It's like an all-star game," says Ray Daniels, who was at the writing camp for Rihanna.
>
> Daniels manages a songwriting team of two brothers, Timothy and Theron Thomas, who work under the name Rock City. "You got all the best people, you're gonna make the best records," he says.
>
>
> Notes
>
> These are rough estimates based on interviews with industry insiders. The figures have not been confirmed by Rihanna’s label, Def Jam.
> Here's who shows up at a writing camp: songwriters with no music, and producers toting music tracks with no words.
>
> The Thomas brothers knew producer Shama "Sham" Joseph, but they had never heard his Caribbean-flavored track that became "Man Down."
>
> According to Daniels, the brothers listened to the track and said, "Let's give Rihanna a one-drop! Like, a response to 'I shot the sheriff!"
>
> They wrote the lyrics to "Man Down" in about 12 minutes, Daniels says.
>
> To get that twelve minutes of inspiration from a top songwriting team is expensive — even before you take into account the fee for the songwriters.
>
> At a typical writing camp, the label might rent out 10 studios, at a total cost of about $25,000 a day, Daniels says.
>
> The writing camp for Rihanna's album "had to cost at least 200 grand," Daniels says. "It was at least forty guys out there. I was shocked at how much money they were spending! But, guess what? They got the whole album out of that one camp."
>
> A writing camp is like a reality show, where top chefs who have never met are forced to cook together. At the end, Rihanna shows up like the celebrity judge and picks her favorites.
>
> Her new album has 11 songs on it. So figure that the writing camp cost about $18,000 per song.
>
> The songwriter and the producer each got a fee for their services. Rock City got $15,000 for Man Down, and the producer got around $20,000, according to Daniels.
>
> That's about $53,000.00 spent on the song so far— before Rihanna even steps into the studio with her vocal producer.
>
> The vocal producer's job is to make sure Rihanna sings the song right.
>
> Makeba Riddick didn't produce Rihanna's vocals on "Man Down," but she's one of the industry's top producers, and has worked with the singer on many songs, including the two number one hits in 2010: "Rude Boy" and "Love the Way You Lie."
>
> When Riddick works with a singer, she'll say, "I need you to belt this out, I need you to scream this, as if you're on one end of the block and you're trying to talk to somebody three blocks away."
>
> Or maybe: "Sing with your lips a little more closed, a little more pursed together, so we can get that low, melancholy sound."
>
> Not only that, the vocal producer has to deal with the artist's rider. The rider is whatever the artist needs to get them in the mood to get into the booth and sing.
>
> "They'll have strobe lights, incense burning, doves flying around the studio," she says. (Yes, Riddick has had doves circling her head while she's working.)
>
> Rihanna is "very focused" Riddick says. So no doves.
>
> Riddick's fee starts at $10,000 to $15,000 per song, she says.
>
> The last step is mixing and mastering the song, which costs another $10,000 to $15,000, according to Daniels.
>
> So, our rough tally to create one pop song comes to:
>
> The cost of the writing camp, plus fees for the songwriter, producer, vocal producer and the mix comes to $78,000.
>
> But it's not a hit until everybody hears it. How much does that cost?
>
> About $1 million, according to Daniels, Riddick and other industry insiders.
>
> "The reason it costs so much," Daniels says, "is because I need everything to click at once. You want them to turn on the radio and hear Rihanna, turn on BET and see Rihanna, walk down the street and see a poster of Rihanna, look on Billboard, the iTunes chart, I want you to see Rihanna first. All of that costs."
>
> That's what a hit song is: It's everywhere you look. To get it there, the label pays.
>
> Every song is different. Some songs have a momentum all their own, some songs just break out out of the blue. But the record industry depends on hits for sales. Having hits is the business plan. The majority of songs that are hits — that chart high, that sell big, that blast out of cars in the summertime— cost a million bucks to get them heard and played and bought.
>
> Daniels breaks down the expenses roughly into thirds: a third for marketing, a third to fly the artist everywhere, and a third for radio.
>
> "Marketing and radio are totally different," he says. "Marketing is street teams, commercials and ads."
>
> Radio is?
>
> "Radio you're talking about . . ." he pauses. "Treating the radio guys nice."
>
> 'Treating the radio guys nice' is a very fuzzy cost. It can mean taking the program directors of major market stations to nice dinners. It can mean flying your artist in to do a free show at a station in order to generate more spots on a radio playlist.
>
> Former program director Paul Porter, who co-founded the media watchdog group Industry Ears, says it's not that record labels pay outright for a song. They pay to establish relationships so that when they are pushing a record, they will come first.
>
> Porter says shortly after he started working as a programmer for BET about 10 years ago, he received $40,000.00 in hundred-dollar bills in a Fed-Ex envelope.
>
> Current program directors told me this isn't happening anymore. They say their playlists are made through market research on what their listeners want to hear.
>
> In any case, to return to our approximate tally: After $78,000 to make the song, and another $1 million to roll it out, Rihanna's "Man Down" gets added to radio playlists across the country, gets a banner ad on iTunes ... and may still not be a hit.
>
> As it happens, "Man Down" has not sold that well, and radio play has been minimal.
>
> But Def Jam makes up the shortfall by releasing other singles. And only then— if the label recoups what it spent on the album — will Rihanna herself get paid.
>
>
>
> ---
>
> Romy Ilano
> Founder of Snowyla
> http://www.snowyla.com
> romy(a)snowyla.com
Hi all,
Enclosed is a flyer for the workshop that you may post or email to friends.
The below message came from the Noisebridge list, and is very closely
related to what we are trying to do in our workshop. It might be seen
as the next step for those who participate in our workshop.
cheers
Hilary
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Glen Jarvis <glen(a)glenjarvis.com>
To: NoiseBridge Discuss <noisebridge-discuss(a)lists.noisebridge.net>
Date: Sun, 16 Jun 2013 12:07:53 -0700
Subject: [Noisebridge-discuss] From NAND gates to Tetris... wanna do it?
In doing research on MOOC, I ran into this video. It's a computer
science program that I'm personally excited about. It's a *perfect*
Noisebridge project.
One can build a computer (from the scratch: NAND gates -> Chip Sets ->
Hardware Platform -> Assembler -> Virtual Machine -> Operating System
-> Compiler -> Tetris Game).
Here is the Ted talk that I saw that introduced me to the program:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iE7YRHxwoDs
Here are the course materials:
http://shimonschocken.com/?page_id=65http://www.nand2tetris.org/
This is incredibly good (and exciting) stuff. Is this already on the
noisebridge calendar? Should it be? (+1 votes accepted).
Kindest Regards,
Glen
--
"Pursue, keep up with, circle round and round your life as a dog does
his master's chase. Do what you love. Know your own bone; gnaw at it,
bury it, unearth it, and gnaw it still."
--Henry David Thoreau
---
Hilary Naylor
www.a2zed.us
Oakland CA
In addition to Sudo kids in the radio this is a good one... There are very few female producers in the industry. Famous female pop stars rarely write the words or produce their own music. They're chosen for their looks and are creations of mostly men ...
It's be cool to get more women into audio engineering and djing at the sudoroom radio
---
Romy Ilano
Founder of Snowyla
http://www.snowyla.com
romy(a)snowyla.com
Begin forwarded message:
> From: Romy Ilano <romy.ilano(a)gmail.com>
> Date: June 16, 2013, 9:46:33 PDT
> To: Romy Ilano <romy(a)snowyla.com>
> Subject: BBC News - Why are female record producers so rare?
>
> http://m.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-19284058
>
> Why are female record producers so rare?
>
> By Mark Savage BBC News entertainment reporter
>
> 29 August 2012 Last updated at 02:47
>
>
> More than 95% of record producers and sound engineers are men
> Over the last few years, it seems women have dominated the music industry, from Adele to Lady Gaga, via Rihanna, who apparently can't leave the house without recording a hit single.
>
> But the story is not being replicated on the other side of the sound desk.
>
> While George Martin or Pharrell Williams are household names, only three women have ever been nominated for best producer at the Brits or the Grammys. None of them went home with the prize.
>
> Recording artist Regina Spektor, promoting her album Far in 2009, admitted to the BBC she had "never even seen the names" of female producers on her record company shortlist.
>
> "It didn't enter my mind to to look for one," she said.
>
> "I should put out a call and say, 'Where are you?'"
>
> She must not have found any - because when her follow-up album What We Saw From The Cheap Seats came out this year, she was the sole woman with a production credit.
>
> "It is a sad case," says Steve Levine, chairman of the UK's Music Producer's Guild. "I've only ever worked with one female studio engineer."
>
> "Oddly enough, there are a lot of quite powerful, high position females in record companies - my wife included - but less in the technical arena."
>
>
> Trina Shoemaker won a Grammy for her work on Sheryl Crow's Globe Sessions album
> They do exist, however. Trina Shoemaker is one of them.
>
> "The light bulb went off as a child," she says. "I would put albums on and I would just study their jackets.
>
> "I didn't actually care about the musicians, I cared about how it happened. Why did it come out of the speakers like that? Why does the needle go into that groove and make music come out of those cones? And who does that?"
>
> Inspired by The Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and her headphones, she left home at 18, skipping college to go to LA. She worked as a record company receptionist and a maid in a recording studio for seven years before finally getting a job operating tape machines in New Orleans.
>
> "My family didn't know what I was doing," she says. "They thought I was repairing stereos!"
>
> Eventually, Shoemaker became an apprentice to Daniel Lanois, who helped shape the sound of U2 and Brian Eno, and, in 1998, was the first woman to win a Grammy for sound engineering.
>
> Swagger
>
> These days, Shoemaker is in constant demand as a producer. So why isn't her story more common?
>
> "It's a renegade profession, it's an outlaw profession," says Susan Rogers - one-time studio engineer for Prince, and now an associate professor at the Berklee College Of Music in Boston.
>
> Women who want to enter the field face "a boys' club, or a guild mentality", she says.
>
> "You have to have a lot of swagger. A lot of swagger. If you don't, you won't be successful."
>
>
> The BBC started training female sound technicians in 1941
> Even the successful ones face challenges, says Shoemaker.
>
> "A producer has to turn into the person that fits in with the band," she says.
>
> "If they're a bunch of guys and they're young and they're funny and they tell rude jokes, you have to be a woman who isn't shocked by that and can, as a matter of fact, crush them all with three words."
>
> Sexism may be one factor, but Prof Rogers believes the problem is more basic.
>
> "The bottom line is, women aren't interested," she says.
>
> "Right now, I currently teach engineering and production; and I also teach psychoacoustics and music cognition. In the psychology topics, the students are half women and half men. But in production and engineering, maybe one out of every 10 students is a young woman."
>
>
> In the UK the situation is the same. The Music Producers' Guild says less than 4% of its members are women. And the Liverpool Institute of Performing Arts says only 6% of the students enrolled on its sound technology course are female. That figure hasn't changed for three years.
>
> Yet the problem seems to be restricted to rock and pop. In the theatre, in Hollywood, in radio there are dozens of female sound engineers. Roughly one-quarter of the BBC's sound mixers are women.
>
> "There are no social barriers to a woman becoming a record producer," says Prof Rogers.
>
> "The more stringent and insurmountable constraint is the biological one. A man can, technically speaking, reproduce on his coffee break. It doesn't take all that long, and biologically it doesn't take much of a toll. For a woman, the opposite is true.
>
> "The typical lifestyle of a record producer is very intensive, very competitive, all-consuming. In order to be able to maintain that level of focus and attention and dedication to your craft, it has to come at the expense of reproduction."
>
> "The women who do get into it will do really well... until they reach that point in their late 20s where they say, 'Now its time to have a family'. I tell my female students it's going to come for them. It came for me, and I opted not to have children, to not get married."
>
> Shoemaker, a mother herself, can attest to that.
>
> "Having a baby was a big deal, a game changer," she says. "I was 39 when I got pregnant, so I was already well established, but it did change everything. It took me out of the running for a lot of jobs."
>
> "It's not about being the equivalent of men. It's just that I don't want to raise some weirdo son that ends up being a psycho because I was too busy making records to be a mama."
>
> Prof Rogers says some of her colleagues have tried to artificially boost the number of girls studying production, but its a practice she fights.
>
>
> Susan Rogers now teaches students about production and engineering
> "The last thing I want to see - because I have seen it - is to get young women into the programme who are less dedicated, less motivated and less capable of being good producers. All it does is make things worse for us. They do poorly, they're apathetic, they're not interested and it furthers the stereotype that women can't do this."
>
> Still, Mr Levine hopes more women do see the light. His theory is that they could bring new dimensions to recorded music.
>
> "If I have an observation, it's that a lot of the female engineers have a greater allegiance to the sort of passion a singer-songwriter has, and that comes out in their work.
>
> "They're much more sensitive to the delicacies of sound balancing. I think that's quite an important role."
>
> And Shoemaker, who can reel off the names of several female contemporaries, says she sees things improving.
>
> "Women are entering the field in drives now. There's maybe a 20-year curve before they're fully recognised. But look at doctors - they're pretty much equal now.
>
> "I don't know about pay scales, but if a surgeon walks in and it's a woman on her 800th cardiac surgery, I want her, not the young dude who just walked out of medical school.
>
> "So I think about the time I retire, we'll see a very level playing field."
>
>
>
> ---
>
> Romy Ilano
> Founder of Snowyla
> http://www.snowyla.com
> romy(a)snowyla.com