Wednesday, September 5, 2007

This Might Save Your Life

http://www.metacafe.com/watch/683816/make_a_deadly_crossbow/

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Geek Arts & Crafts



YouTube - How to Increase Your Wi-Fi Signal


Click here to find out more!How to Increase Your Wi-Fi Signal



Does anyone know if this is for real?

Net Neutrality or DIE

The Death Of The Internet Video


The Death Of The InternetThere are groups trying to privatize the internet, meaning it would cost more and it wouldn't be free like it is right now (for the most part). This is a scary

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

I'M Descended From These Apes


Monday, February 12, 2007

Damn Mr. Vice President! We told you not to press that button!



TIME senior writer Michael D. Lemonick fills you in on what's hot in the world of science

Leave a Good-Looking Corpse
Helixiracmips
NASA / JPL-CALTECH

That's what this is: the husk of a largely burned-out star, as photographed by the Spitzer Space Telescope (the Hubble's infrared-sensitive younger brother). Called the Helix Nebula, it lies about 700 light-years from space, and it's what our own solar system could look like in 5 billion years or so. What happens is that an aging Sun-like star blows off its outer layers in a kind of death rattle, creating an expanding cloud of gas. At the core is a white dwarf star--kind of a fiercely glowing leftover ember, still hot enough to heat the cloud and make it glow gorgeously.

The scientific importance here, largely overshadowed by the beauty of the image, is the reddish glow surrounding the white dwarf. It comes from dust, which would ordinarily have been blown away with the billowing gas cloud. This dust, though, was made after the blowoff: it comes from comets that survived that final gasp. Their orbits were disrupted enough during that even that they began crashing together, smashing each other to smithereens.

One historical note: the idea for the Hubble telescope originated with the late Princeton astronomer Lyman Spitzer, way back in 1947. When if was finally built, NASA named it, not after him, but after Edwin Hubble, who discovered the expanding universe in the 1920s. It wasn't until a new, infrared telescope went up in 2003 that Spitzer got the recognition he deserved.

One personal note: Spitzer was an avid mountaineer as well as an astrophysicist. He was officially reprimanded by the dean of Princeton's faculty for scaling the outside of Cleveland Tower, at Princeton's graduate college.

— M.L.

The Media Industry's Dirty Little Secret

Hi-Def the Gangster Move


Make Magazine just had an editorial High-Definition Equals Highly Deadly by Cory Doctorow (Make:08 Toys & Games Projects). In it Doctorow warns us of the impending doom of DRM. He points out how standard-def has been some what sloppy, in his words "fugly (NTSC:Never Twice Same Color!)", but has allowed us to implement "cheap and dirty displays". He rightly argues is the fact that compatibility has been the core of content innovation.
Since Gov. Bush sold of the airwaves


Porn studios quietly courted

It's all hush-hush as backers of HD DVD and Blu-ray formats vie for the industry's attention.
By Joseph Menn and Dawn C. Chmielewski, Times Staff Writers
6:52 PM PST, February 11, 2007

As the opposing camps pushing the next generation of DVDs try to win audiences, they are furtively pursuing the affections of the multibillion-dollar porn industry.

Since the advent of home video, adult entertainment has played a key role in the adoption of new consumer technology. Porn companies, for instance, helped VHS trump Betamax in the '70s. More recently, they began streaming online video long before television networks.

So backers of the rival — and incompatible — HD DVD and Blu-ray formats are trying to entice porn producers to adopt their respective technologies. Even if they're not proud of it.

Last summer, a group pitching Blu-ray visited the Canoga Park offices of Wicked Pictures, whose films include "As Sleazy as 1-2-3" and "Womb Raiders." Wicked executive Jackie Ramos said the Blu-ray proponents spent hours explaining how the movie studio could benefit from releasing Blu-ray DVDs, which deliver dramatically higher picture quality than conventional discs.

But what amused Ramos was the warning that came after the presentation — "They said, 'We can help you, but remember: We were never here.' "

Versions of that message keep popping up as the backers of Blu-ray and HD DVD court the porn industry. Giants with a stake in the outcome include the likes of Microsoft Corp., Toshiba and Sony Corp.

The lengths to which they are going — and won't go — provide one way to measure the progress of the fiercest format war since VHS versus Betamax.

The porn industry has helped the HD DVD camp stay in the game despite support for Blu-ray from big electronics companies and Hollywood.

The battle is still young. Demand for the next-generation DVDs won't really take off until more people own televisions that can take advantage of the superior picture quality. And this month's introduction of an LG Electronics player that can handle either type of next-generation DVD — along with Warner Home Video's unveiling of a new hybrid "Total Hi Def" disc that holds both formats — suggests that the fight could last far longer than first predicted.

HD DVD, whose backers include Microsoft, Toshiba and General Electric Co.'s Universal Pictures, was out of the gate first. But since December, when Sony's PlayStation 3 and other devices that play Blu-ray movies began shipping in volume, Blu-ray disc sales have taken the lead.

Blu-ray has every major Hollywood studio except Universal (some are issuing in both formats). And with 710,000 PlayStation 3s and dedicated players sold through the end of the year, Blu-ray now has about four times as many homes to play in as HD DVD does.

But it is still too early to write off HD DVD, especially with inexpensive players due later this year from Chinese manufacturers, said Tom Adams, president of Adams Media Research. "HD is going to beat Blu-ray to $300 and $200 — all the prices that start unlocking all the segments of population that will buy," he said.

With the race this close, it stands to reason that both sides are paying close attention to the porn kings of the San Fernando Valley. By some estimates, adult titles make up 10% or more of the $24-billion annual market in traditional DVDs.

Plus, anyone wondering who would most appreciate pictures that appear crisper than real life had only to witness a briefing at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last month by LG Electronics, maker of the expensive players for either format. None of the presenter's points gripped the audience like the slow-motion HD DVD video of a model emerging from a swimming pool, every drop glistening as it fell from her white bikini.

Most U.S. porn producers are getting their feet wet with HD DVD.

During those hushed meetings with the producers, HD DVD and Blu-ray promoters insisted on secrecy as they touted the features of their respective formats. Each was sensitive to concerns specific to adult entertainment, such as how to edit out the surgical scars that would otherwise be far too visible.

But the HD DVD side went further, providing training and unofficially connecting the studios with the factories known as replicators, which stamp out discs from a master copy.

The porn industry is having trouble finding replicators to press Blu-ray DVDs.

HD DVD production methods are built on the old DVD standards, so the older machinery can be retooled to make the next-generation discs. But Blu-ray requires expensive new equipment. That's why there are only eight or so Blu-ray replicators in the world.

For Vivid Entertainment Group, the physical production of Blu-ray discs will come to about 35% of those movies' budgets, compared with 15% for HD DVDs and 10% for a standard DVD, said Vivid Chief Executive Steve Hirsch.

Even if a porn studio wants to pay extra for Blu-ray, Sony and Walt Disney Co. make it hard.

Sony manufactures Blu-ray discs but won't do it for adult titles. And Disney requires the replicators it uses to pledge not to use the same machines and employees to publish porn. Disney has its reasons: In the past, porn snippets have accidentally shown up on Disney titles. Neither company would comment for the record about porn.

Since Disney uses most of the biggest U.S. Blu-ray replicators, L.A.-based Vivid, the only adult producer to promise some Blu-ray discs, has been forced to range far afield.

"The Blu-ray people are making it very difficult for the adult guys," Hirsch said.

On the other hand, that may just be because they can afford to be difficult.

If HD DVD mounts a serious comeback, executives at two mainstream Blu-ray studios said, Sony and Disney will consider giving the porn makers a little more quiet help.


joseph.menn@latimes.com

dawn.chmielewski@latimes.com