Stanley Kubrick - The Flying Padre
Apparently one of Stanley Kubrick's first films. I love YouTube.
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Toying with Films, Media, Technology and Futurology
Apparently one of Stanley Kubrick's first films. I love YouTube.
Posted by Soum at 12:14 AM 0 comments
From Wired...
"On November 27, 2006, the final superconducting main magnet was delivered to CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC) -- the most ambitious physics experiment ever created.
Due to come online in November 2007, the LHC is the world's biggest and most powerful particle accelerator. The giant underground loop of tunnels, magnets and detectors will be capable of replicating conditions just after the Big Bang, helping to answer questions about the nature of matter and the creation of the universe.
The ATLAS experiment, which when completed, will at 150 long and 82 feet high be the largest detector at the LHC. It will look for dark matter, the Higgs Boson, and unexpected new physics."
Posted by Soum at 7:01 PM 0 comments
Hilarious! Hahaha...
“Imagine a kung fu flick in which the martial artists spout Situationist aphorisms about conquering alienation while decadent bureaucrats ply the ironies of a stalled revolution. This is what you’ll encounter in René Viénet’s’s outrageous refashioning of a Chinese fisticuff film. An influential Situationist, Viénet’s stripped the soundtrack from a run-of-the-mill Hong Kong export and lathered on his own devastating dialogue. . . . A brilliant, acerbic and riotous critique of the failure of socialism in which the martial artists counter ideological blows with theoretical thrusts from Debord, Reich and others. . . . Viénet’s’s target is also the mechanism of cinema and how it serves ideology.”
Posted by Soum at 3:43 PM 0 comments
Claimed as the "First American Graphic Novel", Blackmark won its creator Gil Kane a Shazam Award. That was back in 1971. If the following description in Wikipedia is anything to go by, it was published after a usual amount of criticism that any new form would face --
"Kane — a major comics artist who helped usher in the Silver Age of comic books with his part in revamping the popular DC Comics characters Green Lantern and the Atom, and who drew The Amazing Spider-Man during an a landmark 1970s run — had previously experimented with the form with his 1968 black-and-white comics-magazine His Name is...Savage, a 40-page espionage thriller also scripted by Goodwin from an outline by Kane.
Kane said Bantam paid him $3,500 for 120 pages (including the cover) all written, drawn and lettered in "camera-ready" form, i.e., in completed form suitable to go immediately to the printing press. (The 120-page figure is either Kane's rounded-off approximation, or means he did the frontispiece and bio-page art gratis.) Kane recalled having to draw "30 pages in one week. Then I'd have to knock off for a week or two to make some additional money" drawing comic-book stories and, mainly, covers."
More here at Wikipedia -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackmark
Posted by Soum at 12:22 PM 0 comments
I have been working to make this startup a reality for about eight months now. When I joined in Feb 2006, the office in Koregaon Park, Pune was a bare space without anything in place. Parsh (the COO) was losing his sleep trying to just get hold a reliable ISP, and electricians were pouring in and out, their raucous making any conversation or discussion impossible. From the bare floors in Feb, we have come a long way. With a super charged Flash team, some outstanding Java developers (and one from the original Java team), and work hours and pace that I have never before seen (no, not even in the Valley), we have finally launched the most cutting edge tool in the Web 2.0 landscape.
Check out.... Nanocast!
We think it will become the next generation tool for bloggers. Nanocast is all about "Remixing everything, everywhere" --- in other words, you grab your pics from Flickr, Photobucket, your videos from YouTube, Blip, remix them online, and then drop them either in your website, ebay, myspace or wherever you choose.
To demonstrate the power of the tool, check out the slideshow below that I created in less than 5 minutes. There are numerous gadgets in the site, so check it out...
Posted by Soum at 12:07 PM 1 comments
Labels: games, nanocast, second life, technology, web 2.0
Another one airing on Current TV right now...
Posted by Soum at 12:05 PM 0 comments
Saw this today morning when I woke up.... my POD airing on Current TV. Nothing much to say though...
Posted by Soum at 5:52 PM 0 comments
Why I love Apple:
"The surprise came in the form of a preview of an unfinished product: The iTV, a small, sleek box that will let people wirelessly move digital movies, TV shows, music videos and photos from personal computers to big-screen televisions.
'I hope that gives you a little bit of an idea of where we are going,' Jobs concluded after talking for about an hour.
Jobs called the iTV 'the missing piece,' and marks the clearest signal how Apple plans to leverage the success of content through iTunes (more than 1.5 billion songs have been downloaded and 220 television shows are available) and the broad appeal of the iPod (more than 60 million have been sold) to stake its claim in your living room. Jobs said the iTV will be available in early 2007 for $299....
.....Posted by Soum at 11:13 AM 0 comments
Labels: apple, gadget, media, technology
Two years ago, when I reached Pushkar, Rajasthan on the first day of the Camel Fair, I was stunned by its grandeur and beauty. What also surprised me was the fact that there were barely any Indian tourists. Of course, everyone from the neighboring towns in Rajasthan was there, including the pilgrims who had come to visit the only Brahma temple in the world.
The small quiet town had literally transformed itself into one giant… eh… fair… with about 50000 camels, equal number of horses and ten times more people. It was also a perfect opportunity for photographers, filmmakers and journalists, with all the Rajasthani colors and flavors, and the full moon night when the pilgrims take bath in the holy lake.
This year, the dates are from Nov 2nd-6th, and I am planning a second trip. It’s hard not to, if I am in the country. Drop a word if you are reading this, and plan to be there. We could sit and chat by in the havelis and down a glass of bhang lassi one of the nights. ;)
Last time, I created several video blogs to give an idea of the atmosphere. One of them won the leaderboard in Current TV recently. You will find more in my video blog.
Posted by Soum at 4:19 PM 2 comments
Labels: culture, films, india, photography, travel
Till now relatively unknown, Machinima films have been coming to fore for the last few months, specially after the sudden mushroom cloud of online video sites started spreading in the blogosphere. From the (semi) official website,
"As you probably learned before, machinima is filmmaking in a virtual environment. To clear things up, let's talk a bit more in detail about how machinima movies can actually be produced and what ways there are to do machinima.
Generally speaking, there a two main ways to produce a machinima movie:
This way of making machinima is easy to learn and feels close to "real-life" filmmaking. It has room for spontaneity and improvisation and adds that human touch to the behaviour of your actors."Live Action Machinima
The action takes place in a networked computer game, mainly using a FPS game. Every player controls a virtual character via mouse and keyboard commands.
Each actor uses a headset with a microphone to perform dialogue, if there is any. Though, sometimes the dialogue is added later in "Postproduction".
One of the players is serving as the cameraman/-woman. His/her point of view is recorded to tape (or harddisk) and represents the "film-footage".
Most of the time, the settings and characters are taken from the game that's being used for filming.
Posted by Soum at 5:25 PM 0 comments