Dear Biohackers,
I was trying to find out what the mold in the backyard of Ahnons house was. It contaminated alot of CCL experiments! Patrik, Ahnon, and I made an instructable on how we found out the species and strain of the mold.
It's a fun little project that can really help students and the curious learn how to do biochemical experiments in their own backyard.
Check it out if you have time @: http://www.instructables.com/id/Backyard-Forensics/
Thanks everyone for the help and guidance!
- Louis
---
Typed with my thumbs.
Anyone have any idea what happened with the beer in the fridge? It looks
like the end of the pipet is missing and all the remaining beer came out.
Any idea if you broke or if the pressure may have broke it? The tank seems
to have been exhausted as well. Any idea when this happended?
http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2014/5/30/oakland-private-securitypat…
In gentrifying neighborhoods, residents say private patrols keep them safe
OAKLAND, Calif. — On a sunny weekday afternoon on the main drag of Rockridge, traffic moves slowly on narrow streets past yoga studios, expensive boutiques and an artisanal ice cream shop. Troy Matthews, a polite 47-year-old with a Southern accent, spends five days a week, from 3 p.m. to 11 p.m., cruising the residential streets and commercial strip of this Oakland neighborhood.
Matthews, a guard with the private security firm Premiere Protective Service (PPS), began patrolling Rockridge two months ago. He wears a badge and a dark blue outfit that resembles a police uniform. As he drives past a park on a quiet street, he smiles at adults and children.
Rockridge is an upper-middle-class neighborhood in Oakland, California. Residents used a crowdfunding website to hire private security guards. Now a second neighborhood, rapidly gentrifying Temescal, is following suit.
David Allen Corby
“I wave at everyone,” he says. A few people wave back.
Last September, two men, ages 17 and 22, held commuters at the Rockridge train station at gunpoint and robbed seven people of their laptops, smartphones and cash. That was the last straw for Paul Liu, a Google economist who lives in the neighborhood. Liu set up a fundraising page on the crowdfunding site CrowdTilt. Within a few hours, he had reached his $8,200 goal; in total, online campaigns have raised $90,000 for private patrols in Rockridge. This fund now pays for Matthews’ salary.
Some 3,500 households in Oakland pay for neighborhood patrols, according to the area’s three main security companies, PPS, Intervention Group Inc. (IGI) and Bay Alarm. Rockridge, perhaps the first to use crowdsourcing to hire private patrols, has inspired another Oakland neighborhood to follow suit.
Nationally, private security neighborhood patrols have gained in popularity in cities with shrinking municipal budgets and police forces, including Atlanta, Detroit, Houston and New Orleans. In those cities, homeowners’ associations and gated communities have increasingly hired security forces over the past decade. But in Oakland, the trend is spreading into mixed-income, non-gated communities.
If you want to bring down robbery, you’ve got to reduce the unemployment rate in the city.
Barry Krisberg
Law professor, University of California, Berkeley
The Brookings Institution recently named Oakland, where a technology boom has fueled rapid gentrification, the seventh most unequal city in the country. For critics, the patrols are the latest symbol of this inequality.
In Oakland’s lowest-income neighborhoods, as many as 40 percent of people live below the poverty line. The city had 4,338 robberies in 2012, the highest per capita rate in the country, according to FBI data. Unemployment in Oakland last August was 11 percent, compared with a national average at the time of 7 percent.
Some criminal justice experts say the solution to crime isn’t more patrolling but greater opportunities for young people and people coming out of prison. “If you want to bring down robbery, you’ve got to reduce the unemployment rate in the city,” says Barry Krisberg, a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley.
Police, meanwhile, say the answer to crime is more cops, who — unlike the private patrols — can investigate crimes, do follow-up and put together cases. But because of city budget cuts, the local police department has shed 162 jobs, or 20 percent of its staff, since 2010.
Oakland Police Capt. Anthony Toribio meets every month with the city’s three main security companies and says he has a good relationship with them. But, he says, “I can’t say what impact private security has had in crime. There has been private security in the Oakland Hills many years, and I can’t say definitively that’s made crime go elsewhere.”
Oakland's police force, though, has its critics, too. The department has long been under fire for misconduct and constitutional violations. Following a decade of foot-dragging on reviewing excessive force complaints and complying with federally mandated reforms, in 2013 a federal judge appointed an overseer to keep the department on track.
Private patrols, meanwhile, operate with less oversight and under a different set of standards than police do, observers say. Unlike the public police, they’re not under constitutional mandate to reveal their methods and keep or share their records — including whether they follow laws and company rules or engage in racial profiling.
“There’s a degree of ambiguity about how private patrols actually operate,” said David Sklansky, a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley.
Patrol area for the Rockridge neighborhood.
Puck Lo
Each private security firm negotiates with the neighborhood that hires it to determine whether guards carry guns and other weapons. Rockridge’s contract, for instance, does not permit guns.
In February, in the wealthy Oakland neighborhood of Oakmore, a security guard chased, shot and injured an 18-year-old man who was later convicted of burglary. The guard’s contract with the neighborhood did not permit him to be armed. (Oakland police say they are still investigating why the guard was carrying a gun.)
Some Rockridge residents say the patrols have been effective in reducing stubbornly high robbery rates. Liu compared the rates of robberies and burglaries in the five months since private patrols began with the rate of incidents over a “baseline” period of four weeks before the patrols started, and found they had dropped by 43 percent.
However, two sociology professors, Hiroshi Fukurai with the University of California, Santa Cruz, and Traci Schlesinger with DePaul University, say the reduction that Liu’s study found is “statistically insignificant,” because of the short time frame of his baseline period. Schlesinger said Liu’s methods don’t take into account other factors that would explain a change in crime rates, like unemployment, housing and income inequality.
Creating more divisions
A crowdfunding campaign for private patrols launched in April by residents of Temescal, a rapidly gentrifying neighborhood adjacent to Rockridge, has split the neighborhood. Critics of the campaign, which met its $15,750 goal on Thursday night*, say that increased policing — whether public or private — will only send more low-income youth of color to prison.
The Kingfish Café and Pub in Temescal, a mixed-income neighborhood in Oakland.
David Allen Corby
Dania Cabello, a youth educator with the Temescal Community Safety Coalition, recalls a meeting held last fall by residents who wanted to bring private patrols to the neighborhood. A security guard with the company ANI Private Security told attendees, “We target people who look like they don’t belong here.”
That approach, she says, is “creating even more division within an already fragmented community in Oakland.” Cabello says she instead wants to see the neighborhood raise money for youth programs or a community center.
Others worry that crowdsourcing bypasses the democratic process. In Rockridge, there was no City Council vote or public announcement to hire the patrols — just a handful of people with money who were making policy decisions for the entire neighborhood, says Sarah Fielding, a recently graduated law student who lives in Temescal. Approximately 226 people contributed the initial $20,000 for Liu’s crowdfunding campaign — less than 6 percent of the neighborhood known as Lower Rockridge.
“You don’t have to knock on anyone’s door,” says Fielding. “You don’t have to talk to anyone who signs up. You don’t have to deal with them even for a minute — just send your check here.”
People don’t know if we’re OPD or not.
Nathan Cook
General manager, IGI
Matthews carries handcuffs, but no gun, as he patrols Rockridge. A security guard for 10 years, he previously worked the graveyard shift at a nursing home. His job now, he says, is to “observe and report” to the police.
Matthews, who moved to the Bay Area from New Orleans a decade ago, says he “doesn’t stereotype” or make assumptions. In fact, he’s very hands-off. If he saw a person climbing through the window of a house, Matthews said, he would wait and watch from his car, rather than immediately call the cops. “The road to hell is paved with gung-ho,” he says.
IGI, the security company Temescal residents are seeking to hire, takes a more aggressive approach.
Nathan Cook, IGI’s general manager, says the company would not patrol Temescal with armed guards. But in order to be a “visible deterrent to crime,” IGI’s cars have spotlights and resemble Oakland Police Department vehicles, he said. Often, Cook said, “people don’t know if we’re OPD or not.”
IGI officers greet “everyone,” Cook said, from “people walking dogs” to “someone sitting in their car,” and ask if the guards can provide assistance. Cook says it’s common for people who have been sitting in cars, presumably casing houses for break-ins, to immediately leave the area after being approached by a guard.
Cook considers that crime deterrence. Others, like youth educator Cabello, call it harassment.
You can’t really avoid being suspicious in this city past the hour of 7 if you’re black. That’s just how it is.
Bianca Brooks
Student at Oakland Technical High School
Bianca Brooks, a senior at Temescal’s Oakland Technical High School, a 10-minute walk from Rockridge, says she wouldn’t “necessarily be opposed” to private patrols. Brooks lives in a mixed-income and racially diverse area a few miles south of the north Oakland neighborhood.
“My house was robbed, and it took over three hours for police to come,” Brooks said. “You’d think they would have put more patrols in the area. But a few weeks later my neighbor was held at gunpoint in our building. If she had not screamed, who knows what could have happened.”
The police never found the assailants in either incident, she says.
However, Brooks, who is black, says she is also worried about how private patrol guards might perceive her. “You can’t really avoid being suspicious in this city past the hour of 7 if you’re black. That’s just how it is.”
*Editor's note: The total for Temescal's online fundraising campaign has been updated to reflect the latest information.
Sent from my iPhone
// Matt
----- Forwarded message -----
From: "Laurie Cooperman Rosen" <Lscoop(a)comcast.net>
To: <mattsenate(a)gmail.com>
Subject: 6/2014 Statement, 2141 Broadway
Date: Fri, May 30, 2014 18:25
Hi Matt-
Attached is the June invoice. No need to pay it if you are planning on
leaving by month end, and there will be additional utilities accruing as we
always bill those in arrears.
We'd like confirm with Sean that he can do one of his events again on
Friday, 6/20..wanted to make sure that there's nothing big planned for that
evening already.
Thanks!
Laurie
On Thu, May 29, 2014 at 10:19 PM, Matthew Senate <mattsenate(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Please confirm the availability of the big space on Friday, 6/20 (evening)
> for another one of Sean’s events…..thank you!
Who is Sean? Is this another rave?
The common space is booked for the Heart's Desire Reading Series,
which is a poetry reading hosted by BAPS:
https://sudoroom.org/events/hearts-desire-reading-series-2/
Saturday night is still open on the calendar though.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Laurie Cooperman Rosen <Lscoop(a)comcast.net>
Date: Thu, May 29, 2014 at 1:46 PM
Subject: Use of big space on Friday, 6/20
To: mattsenate(a)gmail.com, poems(a)zachhouston.com, melissadmack(a)gmail.com
Hi All-
Please confirm the availability of the big space on Friday, 6/20 (evening)
for another one of Sean’s events…..thank you!
Laurie
Jenny or Maxb are maybe available. Can one of you confirm if you can make it tomorrow or Friday? If sometime next week works better, let me and Rachael know asap.
Thanks!
// Matt
----- Reply message -----
From: "Jenny Ryan" <tunabananas(a)gmail.com>
To: "Matthew Senate" <mattsenate(a)gmail.com>
Cc: "sudo-discuss" <sudo-discuss(a)lists.sudoroom.org>
Subject: [sudo-discuss] Fwd: FW: Extra servers
Date: Tue, May 27, 2014 19:08
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
This is wonderful! I'm free in the afternoons and will follow up with
Rachel, unless you'd like to do so and join me?
On Tue 27 May 2014 01:38:33 PM PDT, Matthew Senate wrote:
> Hey Sudoers,
>
> Anyone able to pick up some computers, monitors, keyboards, mice, and
> headsets this Thursday or Friday?
>
> Thanks,
> Matt
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Rachael Evarts <REvarts(a)foe.org>
> Date: Tue, May 27, 2014 at 1:02 PM
> Subject: RE: FW: Extra servers
> To: Matthew Senate <mattsenate(a)gmail.com>
>
>
> Hey Matt,
>
>
>
> We finally got our new computers in and we have 6 desktops to donate.
> Would you also want any extra monitors, keyboards, mice, and headsets? Are
> you available sometime on Thursday or Friday to pick up from the office?
>
>
>
> Thanks!
>
> Rachael
>
>
>
> Rachael Evarts
>
> Operations Associate
>
> Friends of the Earth
>
> 1100 15th St NW, 11th Floor
>
> Washington, DC 20005
>
> REvarts(a)foe.org
>
> (202) 222-0734
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> sudo-discuss mailing list
> sudo-discuss(a)lists.sudoroom.org
> https://lists.sudoroom.org/listinfo/sudo-discuss
- --
Jenny
http://jennyryan.nethttp://sudomesh.orghttp://thevirtualcampfire.orghttp://technomadic.tumblr.com
`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`
"Technology is the campfire around which we tell our stories."
- -Laurie Anderson
"Storytelling reveals meaning without committing the error of defining
it."
-Hannah Arendt
"To define is to kill. To suggest is to create."
- -Stéphane Mallarmé
~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`
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fwd'd
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Keenan <dkeenan44(a)gmail.com>
Date: Thu, May 22, 2014 at 9:00 PM
Subject: [omnilogistics] Fwd: [omnidelegates] Kazoo Introduction
To: "omnilogistics(a)lists.riseup.net" <omnilogistics(a)lists.riseup.net>
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: *Kazoo* <lovekazoo(a)gmail.com>
Date: Wednesday, March 26, 2014
Subject: [omnidelegates] Kazoo Introduction
To: omnidelegates(a)lists.riseup.net
Hello Omni!
I am happy to be involved in this project! The Thursday meetings are hard
for me to make because I have an intern who comes to my SF studio and gives
me free labor on Thursday evenings, but I will try to rearrange that with
her starting next week. I have also been a little late to the game because
I have two other large projects starting that I had planned way before I
knew about the Omni- building a studio from the ground up in Oakland, and
writing and recording an album of my own music. I have been planning this
six-month period from now until September for full-time engagement in those
two previous projects canceling my regular teaching schedule. Ideally I
would love to stay involved in the planning process with the Omni through
the fall, but not begin my specific project within the space until the
November. I'm not sure how that feels to all involved. I welcome your
feedback.
Here is a quick synopsis of what I want to do with the Omni Project:
Creative Empowerment Project
CEP is a screen printing and collateral production studio that makes all
manner of printed media: tshirts, posters, book jackets, perfect-bound
books, business cards, CD and DVD packaging, and various graphic design.
The space has several functions. There will be a cooperative screen
printing space where coop members will pay a small monthly fee (maybe 50$)
to have 24hour access to the community screen printing space. The screen
printing space will be equipt with 8 printing stations so that many people
may use it at the same time. I currently bottom-line a space like this in
San Francisco where I have been screenprinting for the past three years.
This will help cover our portion of the Omni rent. There will also be an
Education/Vocation component to the space where people who are formerly
incarcerated, targeted by racism, or otherwise challenged to survive within
the oppressive economic/justice system can build capacity for
self-employment and group empowerment. Participants in the E/V program
will learn the skills of screenprinting, digital design, layout,
cooperative business functions, and self-promotion through classes and
practice. The E/V collective will take jobs in printing and production to
support its portion of the rent as well as paying its participants for
their labor. Eventually I would like the E/V project to expand to include
people who are under 18, targeted by racism, and disengaged with the public
school system. The E/V project will employ its own students, and hopefully
be taken over by those who have successfully completed the program.
As far as the space is concerned, I think this could happen anywhere in the
building, if it happens in the basement we would require some windows and a
separate entrance so the coop members could have 24hour access without
necessarily accessing the rest of the Omni building.
Looking forward,
Kazoo
* please vote for my design: *
* http://www.independentmusicawards.com/imanominee/13th/Design
<http://www.independentmusicawards.com/imanominee/13th/Design> *
*and this is what i do:*
*etsy.com/shop/kazoostudio* <http://etsy.com/shop/kazoostudio>
*www.thepartystarterdotcom.com/readingrainbow.jpg
<http://www.thepartystarterdotcom.com/readingrainbow.jpg> *
Some of you may have noticed the blackboard message in the common room
today. For those who haven't, it says:
PLEASE MOVE. PLEASE TAKE YOUR ELITIST SELF-ABSORBED ASSES TO YOUR
DREAMSPACE UPTOWN "OMNI" SPACE AND STOP PRETENDING TO REPRESENT "COMMUNITY"
Last night at about 11:30 pm I was sitting in the common space, hacking
away on my laptop, when Johannes (one of the tenants of the building) set
up the projector and started watching a comedy tv show in the common room.
It was just him near the projector and me and Anthony sitting in the
couches near sudo room.
Johannes went and turned off half the lights in the common room without
communicating with us. I was bothered by this and went over and turned the
lights back on. He then came over to me and angrily asked if I really
_needed_ the lights on. I calmly responded "I prefer the lights on". He
then got very upset and started ranting at nobody in particular (though of
course in response to me) as he stomped around the room. I then said "It's
polite to ask before changing the lighting in a room with other people".
This is truly the extent of our interaction, and I communicated in a calm
and neutral manner throughout. Johannes kept angrily ranting, then turned
off the projector. He came back in and out of the room carrying a
blackboard several times. It wasn't until I got up from the couch later
that I saw the message he'd left.
I realize this negative interaction could potentially have been prevented
had I talked to Johannes first instead of just turning the light back on
(though I have attempted this before when he's been disruptive in the
common space, with limited success). The reason I bring this up on the list
is that I am concerned by the disproportionate anger that this small
incident triggered. I feel like it requires a serious lack of
self-awareness / empathy to deal with the incident as Johannes did.
I am documenting this in case this becomes a pattern of behavior that needs
to be addressed in the future.
--
marc/juul