Original picture by OpenSourceWay.
Here is the weekly links round-up from around the whole web. Okay, probably only part of it. As always, enjoy and feel free to leave your own links in the comments section.
-
From GOOD magazine, a surprising terrain for sharing: history's nine biggest blackouts.
-
The Students for Free Culture 2011 conference is less than a month away.
-
A new report is out on the openness of EU public information.
-
Hackers of the world unite! The Telekommunist Manifesto by Dmytri Kleiner (.pdf warning).
-
Does growth mean more driving? The Center for Clean Air Policy says "no way" in their new report (.pdf warning).
-
How to publish your book on Amazon's Kindle.
-
Sign up now for the Commons Knowledge Alliance's free four-week online course.
-
What does it take to live in a tiny house? Ben Brown finds out. (Hint: it involves the people outside)
-
A cartoon that explains the six types of awful public art.
-
A federal judge puts off deciding whether a Playstation hacker has to surrender his gear while being sued by Sony.
-
From AdFreak, your life will soon be nothing but Facebook.
-
Eleven examples of hand-stamped business cards - might have to try this one myself.
-
A design for a new biolamp that uses carbon to light the street.
-
"Temporary Hegemonic Zones" - Stevphen Shukaitis looks at the nation as art.
- How government regulations and incentives push toward energy centralization - and the alternatives.
Rate this article
Related Articles
- Facebook Poses a Far Greater Threat to the Web than Apple
- It's Working: RE-AMP's Network Strategy for Renewable Energy
- Emergent by Design
- The Cob Cat House that Community Built
- Crowdfunding Nation eBook Now Available In ePub and Kindle Formats
- Share Or Die: In Print!
- Microtouch: An Open Source, DIY eBook Reader and Mobile Media Device
- What You’ll Need to Run a Successful Crowdfunding Campaign
- L.A. Rappers Bust on Whole Foods [Video]
- Libraries Become Centers for Sharing



Recent comments